<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00038666_0001"/>
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Summer School Queen<lb/>
Organization desiring to sponsor<lb/>
, girl in the Summer School Queen<lb/>
Contest should enter their entrants<lb/>
Mm- d photograph, suitable for dis-<lb/>
play, in the S(JA office on or before<lb/>
I hurdav. July 14.<lb/>
Eastt<lb/>
ime XXXV<lb/>
East Caro lin a College<lb/>
Entertainment Series<lb/>
A group of versatile entertainers,<lb/>
The NotaMes, win appear in concert<lb/>
tonight in Wright Auditorium. The<lb/>
group will present light classic and<lb/>
popular entertainment. Curtain time<lb/>
for this event is 8:15.<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C, THURSDAY, JULY 7, 1960<lb/>
2"nment y-vssociatior<lb/>
Discusses Dance Plans; July 16th<lb/>
By JIM KIRKI Avn ' <lb/>
- wtak'l regular meeting<lb/>
kmntc School Si;A, Henry<lb/>
 i . mmittee uK.rt of the<lb/>
the annual .ummer school<lb/>
jhted the discussion.<lb/>
 sported that "the biggest<lb/>
wnt for the summer<lb/>
S.tt.i day Right, July ltth.<lb/>
ne into detail in the<lb/>
ill and selection of the uw<lb/>
Qusstt. lie stated that<lb/>
rt wiU he SMMM to keep<lb/>
ana. quean i aociat<lb/>
presentation of the court<lb/>
from the day students,<lb/>
, sororities, fraternities,<lb/>
vampus organization<lb/>
I be submitted at the<lb/>
bj 4 o'clock, Thursday,<lb/>
two letpiirements for nil<lb/>
sd are that they have a<lb/>
i and will be enrolled in<lb/>
on of summer school.<lb/>
. i- requested to submit a<lb/>
Si 10 ;' otocrftpb for display<lb/>
ge I nion on election day.<lb/>
aj - set for Friday, July<lb/>
 ion area of the<lb/>
m tttween the hours of<lb/>
ai d 4:00 p.m.<lb/>
  p Yansant with the<lb/>
g rnent were M. H. Prid-<lb/>
Kilpatriek. Kilpat-<lb/>
id to make arrunge-<lb/>
refreshntenta, leaving the<lb/>
 .it ions to Pridgen.<lb/>
meeting, Vansant said in<lb/>
v. "Here is  chance for<lb/>
to really enjoy them-<lb/>
We have spent quite a lot of<lb/>
: the Richard Martby band<lb/>
refreshments, and have<lb/>
attractive decorations lie<lb/>
y JIM KIRKLAND<lb/>
further stated, I hope the <lb/>
 take advantage of the oppor-<lb/>
tunity to select their summer schoo-<lb/>
?" " atted the dance next<lb/>
Saturday night and really<lb/>
uod time<lb/>
have<lb/>
Rives Assumes Hew<lb/>
Position; To Take<lb/>
Playhouse Duties<lb/>
 for the first time since<lb/>
i MA. from Bant Garo-<lb/>
I . ph Rives is .scheduled to<lb/>
teaching position and Piav-<lb/>
ection duties this Fall.<lb/>
res, : former Playhouse<lb/>
I star of many productions<lb/>
Rve years at BCC, re-<lb/>
ished bis Doctorate at the<lb/>
: Virginia. While there<lb/>
tandhing fellowship in<lb/>
drama,<lb/>
tua n  . tctii itie since<lb/>
:om i-ollege were the pie-<lb/>
t'iv i original plays given<lb/>
He has also pub-<lb/>
ind hook reviews in<lb/>
Virginia Magazine of History and<lb/>
erapby, written history articles in<lb/>
News and Observer and<lb/>
nta Chronicle Herald, and has<lb/>
the Southern Speech<lb/>
Association.<lb/>
a member of Kappa<lb/>
Honorary Educational So-<lb/>
:erted workshop and full<lb/>
. vions for the Army<lb/>
dramatic organizations.<lb/>
- . attended the summer<lb/>
i I niversity of Oxford.<lb/>
 institute of Kduca-<lb/>
' he is living in Enfield.<lb/>
Dr. Rives will teach<lb/>
speech, direct Play-house<lb/>
and serve as technical<lb/>
:  several productions.<lb/>
SGA Sponsors Dinner<lb/>
Hnmitteewoman Marie Bryant<lb/>
"Ported around 100 invitations had<lb/>
" sent to 'he faculty members who<lb/>
m teaching during the summer ses-<lb/>
won inviting them to attend a faculty<lb/>
rf'nwr to be held in the New South<lb/>
dining hall on Thursday evening, Julv<lb/>
  Miss Bryant reported the arrange-<lb/>
wants for the dinner were well under-<lb/>
way, with a guest speaker slated o<lb/>
peak at the social function.<lb/>
The idea for the faculty dinner was<lb/>
originated at the beginning of the<lb/>
summer when a member of the legis-<lb/>
lature suggested the SGA should do<lb/>
something in the way of entertain-<lb/>
ment for the faculty. The SGA is of<lb/>
the opinion that the faculty does<lb/>
unnll things for which they are never<lb/>
recognised, and the student legisla-<lb/>
ture feeks this might be a way in<lb/>
which to recognize the faculty for<lb/>
their services.<lb/>
Dorm Request Denied<lb/>
Miss Sophie Fischel, housemother<lb/>
for Jarvis Dormitory, appeared be-<lb/>
fore the Budget Committee, at the<lb/>
request of President Bob Patterson,<lb/>
representing that dorm. Once again,<lb/>
as in last week's SGA meeting, a re-<lb/>
quest or an appropriation to stage<lb/>
several social functions for the grad-<lb/>
uate residences of Fleming and Jarvis<lb/>
dormitories wes denied.<lb/>
The student legislature felt that<lb/>
tf they were to undertake such a func-<lb/>
tion, it would involve sponsoring 30-<lb/>
- :al functions for eaoh dormitory. It<lb/>
ivai pointed out by Marie Bryant,<lb/>
President of Wi'son Dormitory, that,<lb/>
if the residences of the individual<lb/>
dormitories wished to stage social<lb/>
events, h nominal fee was collected<lb/>
from each residence for this purpose.<lb/>
Urn stead President Ray Futrell, a<lb/>
graduate student, also elaborated the<lb/>
belief of students based upon the<lb/>
planning of the College Union's ac-<lb/>
tivities. Futrel! felt the !C. Us Bingo-<lb/>
Ice cream functions and watermelon<lb/>
cutings were geared equally for the<lb/>
graduate students as much as for the<lb/>
undergraduate students.<lb/>
Nancy Coggins, SGA Treasurer, re-<lb/>
ported the SGA Treasury now has a<lb/>
balance of $1,578.25 left for appro-<lb/>
priations for the remainder of the<lb/>
summer school.<lb/>
Hob Patterson, in closing the meet-<lb/>
ing, charged the group of student<lb/>
legislators to "not let up on ther work<lb/>
ihiring the rest of the summer, hut<lb/>
keep on working with the same enthu-<lb/>
siam exhibited thus far<lb/>
ECC Summer Music Camp Selects<lb/>
Instructors For Coming Session<lb/>
A staff of 35 instructors for the.mington, George Knight of BamweH,<lb/>
Production<lb/>
Opera Theatre Presents<lb/>
Puccini7 In McGinnis<lb/>
Emotions tense to fever pitch in. In addition to SISTER ANGEL-<lb/>
the climactic ending scene of Puccini s ICA, next Saturday's performance<lb/>
opera SISTER ANGELICA, to be will include selection from Acts I<lb/>
presented this Saturday evening at I and IV of Gounod's FUU.ST, to he<lb/>
Number 31<lb/>
ens<lb/>
Sat.<lb/>
lHO Summer Music Camp at the col<lb/>
age has been announced by Director<lb/>
1-arl E. Beach of the music depart-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
The event, sixth annual camp, wil'<lb/>
bring to the campus approximately<lb/>
MX) junior and senior high school<lb/>
students from North iCarolina and<lb/>
other states. Instruction is offered<lb/>
in vocal and instrumental music,<lb/>
theory, conducting, and other phases<lb/>
of music; in arts and crafts; in<lb/>
creative dancing; and in techniques<lb/>
for majorettes and drum majors.<lb/>
Directors Plan Three Bands<lb/>
Three bands, organized at the camp<lb/>
for musicals of various levels of ad-<lb/>
vancement, will he directed by Herbert<lb/>
L Carter, director of bands at East<lb/>
Carolina; Edward D. Benson, super-<lb/>
visor of music in the Asheville schools;<lb/>
and Spencer Mims of the Myers Park<lb/>
High School in Charlotte.<lb/>
Gordon Johnson of the music de-<lb/>
partment will direct the camp choirs.<lb/>
Donald H. Hayes, also of the cbl-<lb/>
lege faculty, will be conductor and di-<lb/>
rector of the camp orchestra.<lb/>
Members of the East Carolina de-<lb/>
partment of music who are i icluded<lb/>
on the music camp staff and the sub-<lb/>
jects they will teach are Dr. Robert<lb/>
Tarter, piano; Lewis Danfelt, reeds;<lb/>
Dr. W. Edmund Durham, theory; and<lb/>
James Parnell, brasses. Thomas E.<lb/>
Mims of the college faculty will teach<lb/>
arts and crafts, and Dr. N. M. Jor-<lb/>
gensen, director of heath and physi-<lb/>
cal education will be in charge of<lb/>
recreation. Mrs. Laverne Crenshaw of<lb/>
Greenville, East Carolina student,<lb/>
will be instructor in creative dancing.<lb/>
Visiting instrjetors include exper-<lb/>
ienced band directors and teachers of<lb/>
music from both North and South<lb/>
Carolina. They are Donald Adcock of<lb/>
S. C, Harry Shipman of Kinston, and<lb/>
Edward Taylor of Clinton, reeds; John<lb/>
Albea of Burlington, percussion instru-<lb/>
ments; Virginia Frank of High Point,<lb/>
Richard Southwick of Raleigh, and<lb/>
Janet Southwick of Raleigh, strings;<lb/>
and Robert Gaskins of Jacksonville.<lb/>
Harold Grant 1 f Burlington, James<lb/>
E. Rodgers of Greenville, and Lee<lb/>
Rogers of Smithfield, brasses.<lb/>
Former Drum Major Teaches<lb/>
Techniques for majorettes and<lb/>
drum majors will be taught by Robert<lb/>
Ellwanger of Rockingram and the<lb/>
Ayden-Winterville school, formerly<lb/>
drum major with the East Carolina<lb/>
Marching Band; Karen Kaiser of<lb/>
Grand Rapids, Mich national twirl-<lb/>
ing champion; Elizabeth Rogers of<lb/>
Greenville and Linda Leary of Eden-<lb/>
ton, East Carolina majorettes; and<lb/>
Dianne Mattocks of Jacksonville,<lb/>
Wake Forest majorette.<lb/>
The counseling staff of the camp<lb/>
will be headed by Louise Winstead of<lb/>
Elm City, dean of girls, and Loy<lb/>
Wagner of Ware Shoals, S. C, dean<lb/>
of boys. Counselors will be Peggy<lb/>
Griffin of Douglas, Arizonia; Ethel<lb/>
Leary of Wallace; and Marion Mar-<lb/>
tin of Whiteville.<lb/>
and<lb/>
Rockingham, William Adcock of Wil- the college<lb/>
ROCKY MOUNT BUSINESSMAN<lb/>
TO SPEAK AT EAST CAROLINA<lb/>
Arthur L. Tyler of Rocky Mount,<lb/>
executive vice president of the Belk-<lb/>
Tyler Company Department Stores,<lb/>
spoke to members of a class in Prin-<lb/>
ciples of Retailing at the College<lb/>
Wednesday, July 6. Mr. Tyler was for<lb/>
twelve years on the Board of Trus-<lb/>
tees of East Carolina College<lb/>
The Retailing class is taught by<lb/>
Dr. James L. White, professor of<lb/>
business, and is composed of juniors<lb/>
seniors majoring in business at<lb/>
Carter Directs Summer School Band Concert<lb/>
, of Bands, Herbert E. Carter. The summer school band performed before approximately 200 persons<lb/>
18 last Thursday's performance.<lb/>
MvGinnis Auditorium by the East<lb/>
Carolina College Opera Theatre as<lb/>
its featured summer production. Just<lb/>
before her death by poison Sister<lb/>
Angelica sees a vision of her illegiti-<lb/>
mate son being led toward her by the<lb/>
Holy Virgin. In Saturday's perform-<lb/>
ance Angelica will be played and sung<lb/>
by Mrs. Alison Moss, ECC graduate<lb/>
student, and the vision she sees in<lb/>
her dying moments will be her own<lb/>
son, litt e Reynolds Moss, aged seven.<lb/>
Other Greenvilians who will be<lb/>
singing important roles in the opera<lb/>
wi 1 be Mrs. Martha Bradner, well<lb/>
known throughout this section for<lb/>
her beautiful voice, who will play the<lb/>
dual roles of the Princess and the<lb/>
Mistress of the Novices, and Jeanne<lb/>
Peterson, who will sing Sister Ger<lb/>
evieve.<lb/>
The entire program promises to be<lb/>
a finished sample of operatic art.<lb/>
Paul Hickfang of the Music Depart-<lb/>
ment, Corine Rickert from the English<lb/>
and Ray Minnis of the Art staff are<lb/>
the faculty members who will con-<lb/>
tribute their ta'ents as Music Di-<lb/>
rector, Stage Director and super-<lb/>
visor of settings and lighting. Gerald<lb/>
Powell and Robert Hessee, student<lb/>
instrumentalists of wide and varied<lb/>
experience, will be at the piano and<lb/>
organ for the musical accompaniment.<lb/>
Sanford Peele and Alice Coriolano<lb/>
will be student directors of stage and<lb/>
make-up staffs.<lb/>
This will be the East Carolina Col-<lb/>
lege Opera Theatre's first summer<lb/>
production, which has been made<lb/>
possible by a grant from Mr. A. .1.<lb/>
Fletcher of Raleigh, president of TV<lb/>
Station WRAL and the founder of<lb/>
.he North Carolina Grass Roots Opera<lb/>
Company, famous among opera enthu-<lb/>
siasts throughout the State. The sum-<lb/>
mer session SGA also has contributed<lb/>
substantial financial help for staging<lb/>
and costuming expenses. Other ECC<lb/>
Opera Theatre productions have been<lb/>
THE BARTERED BRIDE, shown in<lb/>
1957 when the Theatre started, and<lb/>
THE MEDIUM, presented last Feb-<lb/>
ruary. In overall charge of the Opera<lb/>
Theatre work is Paul Hickfang, Mu-<lb/>
ic Department teacher of voice.<lb/>
sung by Mr. Hickfang, Mrs. Peter-<lb/>
son and James Piver, Greenvil'e<lb/>
graduate student now teaching in<lb/>
the Habbtoq school system. Other<lb/>
student singers on Saturday s pro-<lb/>
gram will be Jessamine Hiatt, Carol<lb/>
Erwin, Mary Burrus, Shirley Wil<lb/>
iams, Patsy Roberts, Annette Evans,<lb/>
Jacqueline Harris, Myrtle Pritchard,<lb/>
Vivian Rice, Sarah Sexton and Juanjta<lb/>
Wells.<lb/>
Curtain Saturday for SISTER AN-<lb/>
GELICA is at eight and admission is<lb/>
free. The program shou'd be a musical<lb/>
treat of the vevy highest quality and<lb/>
a wonderful opportunity to see really<lb/>
good opera for eveiybody in eastern<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
Dr. Boyd Speaks<lb/>
lit East Carolina<lb/>
Sponsored By SGA<lb/>
Dr. Bernard Boyd, James A. Gray<lb/>
professor of Biblical Literature at<lb/>
the University of North Carolina and<lb/>
chairman of the department of re-<lb/>
ligion there, recently spoke on re-<lb/>
ligion. The Student Government As-<lb/>
sociation and the Department of Re-<lb/>
ligious Activities of the college spon-<lb/>
sored Dr. Boyd's appearance.<lb/>
Dr. Boyd, a South Carolinian, was<lb/>
born in Mount Pleasant and attended<lb/>
Presbyterian College in Clinton. He<lb/>
earned the Th.B. degree at Prince-<lb/>
ton Theological Seminary, the M.A.<lb/>
at Princeton University, and the Th.<lb/>
White Attends<lb/>
Va. Conference<lb/>
Dr. James L. White, professor of<lb/>
business is attending a summer Busi-<lb/>
ness Conference at Virginia Poly-<lb/>
technic Institute, Blacksburg, Vir-<lb/>
ginia, today and Friday. While there<lb/>
he will present a lecture on Thurs-<lb/>
day afternoon entitled "Our Two-<lb/>
Pronged Guidance Role and will par-<lb/>
ticipate in two panel discussions on<lb/>
Thursday night and Friday afternoon.<lb/>
The theme of the conference is<lb/>
'Aiming Business Education at Both<lb/>
Ends of the I. Q. Scale The major<lb/>
problem to be oiscussed' is "how best<lb/>
to challenge our brightest students<lb/>
and how best to motivate and provide<lb/>
employable skills to our non-academ-<lb/>
ically inclined students<lb/>
Business teachers from college de-<lb/>
partments of business in California,<lb/>
Ohio, Georgia, New York, and North<lb/>
Carolina will present the major lec-<lb/>
tures.<lb/>
Representatives of State Depart-<lb/>
ments of business education and exe-<lb/>
cutive officers of several publishing<lb/>
companies will round out the list of<lb/>
personalities taking part in the con-<lb/>
ference. It is expected that more than<lb/>
200 business teachers will attend the<lb/>
two-day meeting.<lb/>
Governments Offer<lb/>
Numerous Grants<lb/>
For Graduate Study<lb/>
Two huudred fellowships for grad-<lb/>
uate study in 13 foreign countries<lb/>
will be offered by foreign govern-<lb/>
ments and universities through the<lb/>
Institute of International Education<lb/>
for the academic year 1961-42.<lb/>
The Institute announced today that<lb/>
applications for the fellowships are<lb/>
now available and will be accepted<lb/>
until November i, 1960.<lb/>
The scholarsnips cover tuition and<lb/>
varying amounts of maintenance hi<lb/>
universities in Austria, Canada, Den-<lb/>
mark, France, Germany, Iran, Israel,<lb/>
Italy, Mexico, the Netherlands, Po-<lb/>
land, Sweden and Switzerland. Stu-<lb/>
dents applying for Italian univerai-<lb/>
D. at Union Theological Seminary in ty awarda or Austrian, Danish,<lb/>
Richmond, Va<lb/>
Before joining the staff of the<lb/>
University of North Carolina, he held<lb/>
he post of professor of Bible at Pres-<lb/>
byterian College for ten years and at<lb/>
Davidson College for three years. He<lb/>
is a recipient of the Tanner Award<lb/>
for Distinction in College Teaching.<lb/>
At the University of North Caro-<lb/>
lina, he has participated in the edu-<lb/>
cational television program of WUNC-<lb/>
TV in the broadcasts "Bernard Boyd<lb/>
nnd the Bible "The Original and<lb/>
eignificance of the Bible and "In-<lb/>
troduction to New Testament Litera-<lb/>
ture<lb/>
During World War II, Dr. Boyd<lb/>
as a chaplain, USNR; served with<lb/>
the Marines in the Pacific area; and<lb/>
won the Purple Heart.<lb/>
He is a member of the Society of<lb/>
Biblical Literature and Exegesis, the<lb/>
American School of Oriental Research,<lb/>
and the National Association of Bibli-<lb/>
f Instructors.<lb/>
Arrangements for Dr. Boyd's lec-<lb/>
tures at East Carolina were made by<lb/>
Dr. Cleveland J. Bradner, director of<lb/>
religious activities at the college here.<lb/>
French, German, Israeli, Italian or<lb/>
Netherland Government awards may<lb/>
apply for a Fulbright travel grant<lb/>
to supplement their scholarships. Two<lb/>
additional award offered by an<lb/>
American foundation, are for study<lb/>
in any country in the Far East, South<lb/>
or Southeast Asia and Africa.<lb/>
General eligibility requirements<lb/>
are United States citizenship, a<lb/>
Bachelor's degree or its equivalent<lb/>
before departure, language ability<lb/>
sufficient to carry on the proposed<lb/>
study, and good health. A good aca-<lb/>
demic record and demonstrated ca-<lb/>
pacity for independent study are also<lb/>
recessary. Preference is given to ap-<lb/>
plicants under 35 years of age who<lb/>
have not hsd extensive foreign ex-<lb/>
perience. While married parsons are<lb/>
eligible for most of the awards de-<lb/>
scribed above, the stipends are geared<lb/>
to the needs of single grantees.<lb/>
For further information and ap-<lb/>
plication forms, prospective appli-<lb/>
cants should write to the Information<lb/>
and Counseling Division, Institute of<lb/>
International Education, 1 East 67th<lb/>
Street, New York 21, New York.<lb/>
ANGELIC VJEMBE"S  " in thiseneoflWsrTiiirlR-<lb/>
ANGELICA, .nclude Juanita Wells, Jackie Harris, and Jessamine Hiatt.<lb/>
Ten of North Carolina's 110 de-<lb/>
legates are women; Miss Hardison<lb/>
will be the youngest woman attending<lb/>
the convention. For her first visit to<lb/>
the west coast, Miss Hardison com-<lb/>
mented, "My biggest problem has<lb/>
been in selecting my wardrobe<lb/>
English Professor To Attend<lb/>
L. A. National Convention<lb/>
By PATSY ELLIOT<lb/>
Representing North Carolina in the be no sp it in the first ballot.<lb/>
National Democratic Convention<lb/>
scheduled to begin next Monday in<lb/>
Los Angeles, California will be Miss<lb/>
Janice Hardison, faculty member in<lb/>
the Department of English. Wrhile re-<lb/>
presenting Pitt County at a state<lb/>
Democratic meeting, Miss Hardison<lb/>
was selected to attend the convention<lb/>
as an alternate with four delegates<lb/>
and one other alternate, from the<lb/>
First Congressional District.<lb/>
When asked why she was selected<lb/>
to attend the National Convention,<lb/>
Miss Hadison stated, "I had indicated<lb/>
my wish to attend the convention; I<lb/>
happened to be in the right place at<lb/>
the right time<lb/>
Miss Hardison will leave the east<lb/>
coast Friday morning and arrive in<lb/>
Los Angeles that afternoon. As pre-<lb/>
liminary activity prior to' the con-<lb/>
vention, teas, dinners, and other af-<lb/>
fairs wil! be held for the purpose of<lb/>
meeting the candidates. Miss Hardi-<lb/>
son plans to attend a reception to be<lb/>
given Sunday for Senator and Mrs.<lb/>
Kennedy and the National Democratic<lb/>
Dinner Sunday night.<lb/>
North Carolina delegates go to the<lb/>
convention uninstructed as to whom<lb/>
they should support, but according<lb/>
13 Miss Hardison the ballot will be<lb/>
cast for Lyndon Johnson; there will<lb/>
Withey Accepts<lb/>
Research Grant<lb/>
Dr. Joseph A. Withey, associate pro-<lb/>
fessor of English has accepted a<lb/>
United States Educational Exchange<lb/>
'irant. The purpose of this grant is<lb/>
for Dr. Withey to conduct research<lb/>
in theatre arts at the University of<lb/>
Mandalay in Burma for the academic<lb/>
year, 1960-1961.<lb/>
This grant is one of more than<lb/>
four hundred for lecturing and re-<lb/>
search made under provisions of the<lb/>
Fulbright act. They are made by the<lb/>
Board of Foreign Scholarships whose<lb/>
members are appointed by the Presi-<lb/>
dent.<lb/>
Grants are offered through exe-<lb/>
cutive grants in Argentinia, Austra-<lb/>
'ia, Austria and several other foreign<lb/>
countries.<lb/>
As director of the East Carolina<lb/>
Playhouse Dr. Withey has directed<lb/>
many outstanding productions such<lb/>
as Teahouse of the August Moon and<lb/>
Diary of Anne Frank. This summer<lb/>
he directed The Third Frontier pro-<lb/>
drced in New Bern celebrating their<lb/>
250th anniversary and next session<lb/>
be plans to direct See How They Rhh,<lb/>
an English farce, to be given at PC<lb/>
and at Carolina Beach.<lb/>
Scott Authors<lb/>
Two Articles<lb/>
Dr. Frank A Scott, faculty member<lb/>
of the psychology department and di-<lb/>
rector of testing at East Carolina Col-<lb/>
lege, is the author of two articles<lb/>
appearing in cunent educational pub-<lb/>
lications.<lb/>
A bulletin entitled "Leadership:<lb/>
Opportunities and Responsibilities"<lb/>
and issued to mark the thirtieth an-<lb/>
niversary of the Delta Kappa Gamma<lb/>
Society, national organization for wo-<lb/>
men in education, carries in summary<lb/>
form a discussion by Dr. Scott of an<lb/>
instrument to determine the effec-<lb/>
tiveness of school principals.<lb/>
The article, "The Development and<lb/>
Evaluation of an Instrument to As-<lb/>
sess the Attitudes of Public School<lb/>
Principals is based on an exhaustive<lb/>
study of principalships in the State of<lb/>
Georgia. The measuring device de-<lb/>
veloped by Dr. Scott is designed as<lb/>
m aid in screening applicants for<lb/>
principal's positions. The complete<lb/>
study by Dr. Scott originally ap-<lb/>
peared in the "Journal of Experimen-<lb/>
tal Education" for March, 1958.<lb/>
The June issue of the "American<lb/>
Journal of Psychology" includes a-<lb/>
niong contents a study by Dr. Scott<lb/>
of "The Effect of Interpolated, E-<lb/>
motionally Toned Stimuli on Learning<lb/>
and Recall. The article deals with the<lb/>
effect upon earning and recall of<lb/>
emotional stimuli and is based on ex-<lb/>
perimental work conducted by Dr.<lb/>
Scott with graduate and undergradu-<lb/>
ate students at Duke University as<lb/>
subjects.<lb/>
Dr. Scott has been a faculty mem-<lb/>
ber at East Carolina since 1957. A<lb/>
native of Virginia, he receive the A.B.<lb/>
and the f.A. degrees at Duke Uni-<lb/>
versity and holds the doctor's degree<lb/>
in psychology from tre University<lb/>
f Georgia.<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENT<lb/>
All persons interested in par-<lb/>
ticipating in the annual College<lb/>
Union Talent Show which will be<lb/>
held during the second summer<lb/>
session, watch for farther an-<lb/>
nouncements to appear on the<lb/>
College Union bulletin hoard.<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00038666_0002"/><lb/>
PAGE TWO<lb/>
  ?<lb/>
 AST CABOIilNIAN<lb/>
THURSDAY, JULY 7, <lb/>
r<lb/>
Personal Appearances Of<lb/>
Men Students Need Change<lb/>
Mr. Charles Craven, popular news, fea-<lb/>
ture and anecdotal writer for THE NEWS<lb/>
AND OBSERVER, once described his elo-<lb/>
quent and adjective loaded description of a<lb/>
"punk" similar to the following.<lb/>
He walks with a hitch in his stride,<lb/>
sometimes wears a chain or something he<lb/>
can whirl around and around at his side to<lb/>
gain attention from any passerby. He has<lb/>
long hair, combed straight back in the latest<lb/>
"duck billed" fashion. His trousers are pegged,<lb/>
his belt quite thin and his waist line is much<lb/>
lower than what the normal physiology books<lb/>
of the mammal say it should be. Sometimes<lb/>
he wears a goatee or beard, etc. These people<lb/>
sometimes are classified a3 "punks<lb/>
Certainly there is the beatnik, the hood-<lb/>
lum and the punk. All are quite different<lb/>
too. in personality, morals and appearances.<lb/>
We should examine some of the young men<lb/>
walking around on our campus and come up<lb/>
with a definite conclusion concerning their<lb/>
personal appearances. What else could one<lb/>
possibly surmise after seeing men, 22 years<lb/>
oi age. walking around in shorts, no sox on<lb/>
their feet, dirty loafers and shirt tails hang-<lb/>
ing out?<lb/>
Washington and Lee, University of Lex-<lb/>
ington. Virginia does not have this problem.<lb/>
If one may be so curious to wonder just why,<lb/>
it is quiteobvious. The University there does<lb/>
not tolerate young college men from looking<lb/>
like anything but gentlemen. The tie, the<lb/>
buttoned collar and the sports coat are prime<lb/>
prequisites for class attendance. Some of the<lb/>
shirts are tattered and worn but they look<lb/>
neat. Some of the trousers are khaki but they<lb/>
look nice. Some of the students have the same<lb/>
backgrounds as students in other colleges in<lb/>
the south, but they look more like gentlement<lb/>
than do some of their peers.<lb/>
But it is not too much to ask of stu-<lb/>
dents to dress neat and for the occasion.<lb/>
One student remarked last week after ob-<lb/>
serving some of his classmaes walking down<lb/>
he sidewalk adjacent to Wright Circle, "I<lb/>
would not want my wife or mother to see<lb/>
those two dressed as they are as it would<lb/>
make me ashamed of East Caroilna College<lb/>
We let our men run around looking like<lb/>
punks or vagabonds. We ask but do not tell<lb/>
them they get out of line and dress like any-<lb/>
thing but gentlemen. Yet we make the young<lb/>
ladies on this campus walk the chalk line con-<lb/>
cerning their garments. It is quite obvious<lb/>
that this is not fair.<lb/>
We must curtail and limit this outlandish<lb/>
wear on the part of men students or lower<lb/>
the standards for the female students too.<lb/>
East Carolina students yell for money,<lb/>
they yell for standards, they cry for South-<lb/>
ern Conference entrance, they complain of<lb/>
limited dating hours for female students, and<lb/>
they forever and eternally gripe about the<lb/>
way the Student Government handled enter-<lb/>
tainment, as do they concerning food in the<lb/>
cafeteria or treatment in the infirmary.<lb/>
It is high time they gripe about their<lb/>
friends and neighbors. They should be aware<lb/>
of how others around them look and this<lb/>
glaring 10 percent should snap out of their<lb/>
trance and wake up. This is a bonafide Amer-<lb/>
ican accredited college. It is not high school,<lb/>
U. S. A. Do not go yelling they do it at<lb/>
Chapel Hill, they do it at State or they do<lb/>
this at so and so college. This is your college,<lb/>
your place of future educational heritage to-<lb/>
ward the waning days of your young life.<lb/>
Instead of copying wiry not. set the example?<lb/>
Or to coin one well worn phrase, if the shoe<lb/>
fits, wear it! W. M. B.<lb/>
Food For Thought<lb/>
Letters To Editor<lb/>
Students Express<lb/>
Waned Opinions<lb/>
Dear Editor,<lb/>
I have read over the rules for wo-<lb/>
men students on the East Carolina<lb/>
College campus. They seem to be com-<lb/>
plete; I even noticed a striking sim-<lb/>
ilarity between these rules and those<lb/>
observed by a soldier in basic train-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
For instance, the lights go off at<lb/>
10 pm. and there is a barracks check.<lb/>
They have daily inspections and on<lb/>
weekends they have the same pro-<lb/>
cess of signing out if he wishes to<lb/>
go home. The only thing that seems<lb/>
ro be lacking from the girl's regula-<lb/>
lions is Saturday morning stand by<lb/>
inspections and repeat part of the<lb/>
general orders.<lb/>
This is all very well and good for<lb/>
the girls on this campus if the aim<lb/>
ot this college is the same as that of<lb/>
military training. There are, however,<lb/>
several basic differences in the ob-<lb/>
jectives of a college and those of<lb/>
the Army. The Army's main job is<lb/>
to teach people how to fight. A col-<lb/>
lege's main objective should be to<lb/>
train people to think and live in a<lb/>
democracy.<lb/>
During high school a person is<lb/>
living at home with his parents. These<lb/>
parents can be just as democratic<lb/>
or undemocratic as they like. By the<lb/>
time one reaches his or her late teens<lb/>
a person should be trained in self dis-<lb/>
cipline and moral responsibility. If<lb/>
they have not been trained from early<lb/>
childhood on it is too late to train<lb/>
them when they reach college age. I<lb/>
think that enforcing an arbitrary ma-<lb/>
turity on a person with a series of<lb/>
strict rules wiil not change a person,<lb/>
but only aggravate matters.<lb/>
Not only are these rules and re-<lb/>
gulations a matter of self-discipline<lb/>
but also a threat to creative thought<lb/>
in general. These rules and regula-<lb/>
tions do more harm to the bright and<lb/>
conscientious students than to the<lb/>
other girls.<lb/>
The harm done to the conscientious<lb/>
girl student is the pre-occupation with<lb/>
rules rather l.han creative thought,<lb/>
which is not void of rules but de-<lb/>
pend on rules only as a means of<lb/>
reaching the object of one's imagina-<lb/>
tion. My little brother had a teacher<lb/>
in the fifth grade, an EC graduate<lb/>
who was too preoccupied with the let-<lb/>
ter of the law in the text. She re-<lb/>
fused to listen to evidence contrary<lb/>
to the textbook brought in by mv<lb/>
brother from outside reading. I don't<lb/>
believe this is merely an isolated case.<lb/>
American females from the time<lb/>
they could walk have been taught co<lb/>
depend on accurate parroting of ma-<lb/>
terial rather than thinking for suess<lb/>
in the classroom. This has been a re-<lb/>
sult of an environment of rules since<lb/>
early childhood. College should give<lb/>
her a chance to develop self-discipline<lb/>
and the use of the mind. It should<lb/>
be a place for one to mature not<lb/>
a place that is an extension of high<lb/>
school.<lb/>
This writer does not believe that<lb/>
the rules should be taken out of the<lb/>
handbook completely, but I feel that<lb/>
they are long overdue for a serious<lb/>
and complete revision.<lb/>
First Session<lb/>
Ends With Those<lb/>
Rises And Falls<lb/>
By PAT HARVEY<lb/>
Only two more days of sweating<lb/>
and then that long-awaited day rf<lb/>
.xams. l's" will drop and "5 s" will<lb/>
nse-all in one day. And they say<lb/>
that iRome wasn't built in a day-<lb/>
tome fairy tales have to be true . .<lb/>
After attending a watermelon-cut-<lb/>
ting last week one can readily under-<lb/>
stand why students gain weight in the<lb/>
summer. One hoy ate two pieces and<lb/>
was dashing away with another when<lb/>
someone asked him who it was for.<lb/>
rep'ied casually, "well, ya godda<lb/>
Band Presents Admirable<lb/>
Concert For EC Listeners<lb/>
By PATSY ELLIOTT<lb/>
Under the influence of pink and fa<lb/>
ue<lb/>
j&amp;tKen M&amp;ttt&amp;H.<lb/>
July 4th Weekend Creates Quiet<lb/>
Scene On East Carolina Campus<lb/>
During the first week of summer school,<lb/>
Bobby Patterson after being elected to the<lb/>
office of SGA President issued a statement<lb/>
saying that he wanted to do everything pos-<lb/>
sible for the students this summer; and he<lb/>
is. But what about the regular school year?<lb/>
Is our newly elected president thinking along<lb/>
these same trends of thought? There are<lb/>
several issues which have been discussed but<lb/>
have never materialized into anything more<lb/>
than chatter.<lb/>
Although the final decisions are always<lb/>
left up to the administration, this does not<lb/>
necessarily mean that the SGA's hands are<lb/>
tied. Students can always voice an opinion<lb/>
and if it's strong enough the administration<lb/>
will usually render their consideration. Af-<lb/>
ter all. East Carolina students constitute the not quite up to par, there is a good<lb/>
leaders of tomorrowwe hope.<lb/>
A fellow student,<lb/>
Ted Fountain, Jr. <lb/>
Dear Editor,<lb/>
Reparding your editorial of June 30<lb/>
concerning the SGA' summer enter-<lb/>
tainment program, I would like to say<lb/>
that I am certain that your opinions<lb/>
reject the feelings of the majority<lb/>
of the student body.<lb/>
I sympathize with you thoroughly<lb/>
as do the othe1' members of the SGA,<lb/>
but if the summer entertainment is<lb/>
reason for it.<lb/>
Action Needed<lb/>
It's time for the Student Government and<lb/>
administration to do something concrete con-<lb/>
cerning the establishment of an honor system<lb/>
if anything is ever to be accomplished.<lb/>
Last, year the East Carolinian received<lb/>
bundles of letters talking about why we should<lb/>
have an honor system and what could be done<lb/>
to reduce cheating on tests and exams. Stu-<lb/>
dents indicated that they are in favor of the<lb/>
honor system and would join in urging next<lb/>
year's SGA to take steps to enforce a system.<lb/>
Action must be taken soon or the matter<lb/>
should be dropped completely.<lb/>
Parking Problem<lb/>
Students must decide whether they wish<lb/>
to commute to college by foot or by bicycle<lb/>
because the parking problem is still unsolved.<lb/>
Practically the only place for day students<lb/>
to park is on Fifth Street and the street isn't<lb/>
long enough to accommodate the cars un-<lb/>
less double-parking is made lawful. The cam-<lb/>
pus parking system has been evaluated so<lb/>
many times that parking on campus has be-<lb/>
come an ECC joke. There are just o many<lb/>
places for parking and one must decide who<lb/>
should get priority. Perhaps if there were<lb/>
restrictions made on freshmen and sopho-<lb/>
mores the day students could park nearer the<lb/>
school.<lb/>
The main reason for the lack of big-<lb/>
ger names in entertainment is that<lb/>
many performers take the summer<lb/>
off for vacations and relaxation.<lb/>
Another reason is that the majority<lb/>
of the entertainers who are working<lb/>
are booked solid for the entire sum-<lb/>
mer. The entertainment committee<lb/>
of the SGA, which incidentally was<lb/>
appointed during Spring quarter and<lb/>
is not composed of any of the present<lb/>
members, was lucky to secure any en-<lb/>
tertainment at all under these condi-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
A possible solution to this problem<lb/>
would be to have someone look into<lb/>
the entertainment situation foT sum-<lb/>
mer school a little earlier in the year.<lb/>
I might add that the picture is by<lb/>
no means completely bleak. During<lb/>
the second session, a big dance will<lb/>
be held with Richard Maltby and his<lb/>
orchestra from New York furnishing<lb/>
the musfc. Plans are made to crown<lb/>
a summer school queen at the dance,<lb/>
and it should be a big occasion.<lb/>
Buddy Kirpatrick<lb/>
Member Alt Large, SGA<lb/>
By JIM KIRKLAND<lb/>
Heat . . . flies . . . emptiness . <lb/>
just a few words which might have<lb/>
described EC's campus this past week-<lb/>
end. Those persons which were for-<lb/>
tunate enough not to be here were<lb/>
quite lucky. If one were to be walk-<lb/>
ing across campus Saturday morning<lb/>
all together six persons would have<lb/>
been seen. . . and their comments<lb/>
were all of the nature of deadness of<lb/>
the campus for the July 4th weekend.<lb/>
Downtown Greenville was the same<lb/>
way. . . store owners standing in tne<lb/>
doorways waiting for the next custo-<lb/>
mer. However, we understand Aunt<lb/>
Dora was very busy both nights<lb/>
selling the 4th of July refreshment.<lb/>
Monday afternoon the College Union<lb/>
really put on a show. Students and<lb/>
outsiders got sloppy wet eating water-<lb/>
melon, then ventured to the grassy<lb/>
plot behind Wright Building and feas-<lb/>
ted on a large number of hot-dogs.<lb/>
Sbould the CU continue this practice,<lb/>
Mr. Julian will be forced to reduce the<lb/>
price of his 45 cent specials to meet<lb/>
:he free feedings sponsored by the<lb/>
CU.<lb/>
We endorse the memorandum which<lb/>
the good coach sent to men students<lb/>
last week regarding men's apparal on<lb/>
campus. The least thing some of the<lb/>
men can do is keep their shirt-tails<lb/>
in while they are in public places<lb/>
Does anyone know the owner of a<lb/>
little green car that is seen around<lb/>
camlpus every day with a different<lb/>
driver? This little car, sometimes<lb/>
described as "The Green Bug is<lb/>
quite colorful. The gears scrape when-<lb/>
shifted from second to third, the tie-<lb/>
rod is loose, the tires are out of bal-<lb/>
ance, and the front-end is out of line,<lb/>
but this car does have a radio which<lb/>
works . . . and every car should have<lb/>
a radio.<lb/>
Bob Patterson commented the other<lb/>
day of the activeness of the present<lb/>
SGA members. True, there are active<lb/>
members, but then there are several<lb/>
who don't seem to be able to do much<lb/>
but complain . . . about entertain-<lb/>
ment and money, for example. How-<lb/>
ever, they are interested enough to<lb/>
participate.<lb/>
Henry Vansant is hoping to make<lb/>
the Summer School Dance a big thing<lb/>
. . . hope that he can get some real<lb/>
cooperation from his fellow legislators<lb/>
to make his hopes pan out. We should<lb/>
get a sharp looking queen this year<lb/>
. . . there are enough campus beauties<lb/>
around this summer.<lb/>
There is an English professor on<lb/>
campus that really looks like an En-<lb/>
glish professor. Matter .of fact,<lb/>
he is the first English pro-<lb/>
fessor we've seen that plays the<lb/>
role of an English professor. This tall<lb/>
lanky wearer of somewhat collegiate<lb/>
clothes, touched off by brown-rimmed<lb/>
glasses and a pipe, says that one has<lb/>
to drive like crajy for two hours<lb/>
to get anywhere from Greenville . . .<lb/>
also says that the favorite excuse of<lb/>
his colleges when they are late Is<lb/>
they were held up behind two stu-<lb/>
dents.<lb/>
We are sorry to hear that Dr. Roy<lb/>
Prince is leaving HOC. This is our<lb/>
toss ana Appalachian's gain. Thoe<lb/>
persona fortunate enough to have<lb/>
taken class-work under this stately<lb/>
gentleman know that ECC is losing<lb/>
a great personality. Dr. Prince was<lb/>
not only a teacher of foreign lan-<lb/>
guages, but a gieat source of inspira-<lb/>
tion to his students . . . his easy going<lb/>
and understanding of human natuie<lb/>
winning him many friends.<lb/>
This session draws to a close in a<lb/>
i.tatter of just a few days . . . and.<lb/>
those of us that will remain for the<lb/>
second round with the flies, gnats,<lb/>
and heat will once again battle the<lb/>
registration lines. A tip for you who<lb/>
are going to be here for registration<lb/>
. . . get there early, then just wait.<lb/>
It's all very simple . . . just wait . . .<lb/>
wait for the many signatures you'll<lb/>
need on the assortment of colored<lb/>
cards. The big question expected for<lb/>
this forthcoming registration day . . .<lb/>
will it rain?  it always manages to<lb/>
do so.<lb/>
For those of you that might enjoy<lb/>
a different type of recorded enter-<lb/>
tainment . . . try Brother Dave<lb/>
Gardner's attempt on RCA entitled<lb/>
"Rejoice, Dear Hearts Brother Dave<lb/>
has appeared quite frequently on the<lb/>
Jack Parr Show, and in this album<lb/>
he mixes beatnik and biblical phrases<lb/>
in cornepone accents with the result<lb/>
being 45 minutes of colorful southern<lb/>
entertainment.<lb/>
Exams are coming up . . . but don't<lb/>
sweat the small stuff. . .<lb/>
Magazine Cites<lb/>
Low Prices For<lb/>
Classical Records<lb/>
With a small budget allowed for<lb/>
expenses other than eating and tui-<lb/>
tion, a student finds it hard to build<lb/>
his record collection. But according<lb/>
to Hi Fi Review it is an easy matter<lb/>
to 'prove that it is possible to build a<lb/>
genuine classical collection from the<lb/>
more than half-dozen $1.98 record<lb/>
labels.<lb/>
From the one hundred fifty classical<lb/>
discs bearing this inexpensive price<lb/>
tag they have singled out a few which<lb/>
offer distinguished music, well-per-<lb/>
formed, and respectably recorded ac-<lb/>
cording to modern hi-fi standards.<lb/>
The following list is included in<lb/>
their best buys at $1.98:<lb/>
Beethoven: Piano Concerto Mo. 4<lb/>
Richmond B 19017.<lb/>
Beethoven: Violin Concerto in D<lb/>
Richmond B 19304.<lb/>
Beethoven: Symphony No. 8Har-<lb/>
mony 7074.<lb/>
Beethoven: Symphony No. 7Har-<lb/>
mony 7074.<lb/>
He<lb/>
.at breakfast doncha'?" .<lb/>
Tonight the Notables will be enter-<lb/>
taining in Wright. Certainly hone<lb/>
their efforts wont be wasted. (After<lb/>
all they "aint doin this fer nothin'<lb/>
One of the most unusual items<lb/>
printed in last week's paper was the<lb/>
oiiginal request for $450 made by the <lb/>
opera workshop followed by a grant f<lb/>
ol $650. The regular school year was <lb/>
never like this.  <lb/>
Well, one little joke fell through<lb/>
when Manmuch was not shown as the<lb/>
free movie. Just for chuckle informa-<lb/>
Lif.n: the real name of the moviej<lb/>
vas The Man Who Knew Too Much.<lb/>
The putt-putt fans have reallyl<lb/>
heen keeping the course in business<lb/>
wth their daily playing. Actually one<lb/>
doesn't have t. be an avid fan tol<lb/>
lay several times a weekbecause!<lb/>
after all what else is there to do in<lb/>
this place.<lb/>
And while we're complaining about<lb/>
the city of Greenville we should dis-<lb/>
cuss the absence of eating places. Or<lb/>
Sunday nights there is only one<lb/>
restaurant open and one has to be<lb/>
in a state of starvation before he car<lb/>
eat there. College students may bcl<lb/>
poor but they still have the money toj<lb/>
huy food. Anyone care to write a let-<lb/>
ter to the Chamber of Commerce?<lb/>
Next session there will be a newj<lb/>
editor as I will be foot-loose and<lb/>
fancy free as will several of our staff<lb/>
members. There are many jobs avail-<lb/>
able on the newspaper for anyone in-<lb/>
terested in contributing something to<lb/>
the collegework, for instanceand I<lb/>
know that the new editor will be<lb/>
happy to work with you. . .<lb/>
Don't forget to make good grades<lb/>
this summer. According to rumors jun-<lb/>
iors and seniors will not be allowed to<lb/>
return next Fal1 if they are down in<lb/>
quality points even one or two. So<lb/>
don t waste your timestudy much'y<lb/>
. . . end of lecture.<lb/>
skies last Thursday evening, the<lb/>
Concert Band performed admiringl) lor <lb/>
informal crowd that gathered to listen while<lb/>
seated on the freshly trimmed grass The<lb/>
letter w extremely congenial . . ranginjr<lb/>
from students, instructors, 'localities and<lb/>
youngsters to dogs. Uh yes, the gnats' were<lb/>
there, too. They did not appear to be too<lb/>
intent on appreciating the music; but they<lb/>
had more fun just flying around hitting and<lb/>
bouncing on anyone available. Just when<lb/>
you thought you were being inspired by the<lb/>
chimes, you would realize it was only a purple<lb/>
ml red bug crawling teuthily up your ex-<lb/>
posed back.<lb/>
Now if you did not mind the bard, damp<lb/>
giound and the people standing in front of<lb/>
uu (who inculently decided to an down lor<lb/>
the last three minutes of the program) you<lb/>
certainly would have enjoyed the eoncer<lb/>
. . . especially the stimulating marches which<lb/>
nude the youngsters begin to shift their small<lb/>
weights in marching rhythm-<lb/>
Informal outdoor gatherings ren.<lb/>
of the commendable meofl cuttings ffhich<lb/>
have been sponsored by the College Union,<lb/>
from the looks of eiijovnient and - itisf action<lb/>
that were on numerous faces, it ; .(1<lb/>
understand why there was ever anj dispate<lb/>
as to whether or not the College Union would<lb/>
sponsor the cuttings this session. Nothing<lb/>
could be more representative of r. ft.<lb/>
ern summer afternoons than 'aoci<lb/>
freshing with juicy red waterme! t<lb/>
t'ep.si . . . fooled you)  could not help over-<lb/>
hearing1 a classic comment as one refreshed<lb/>
enthusiast rushed back to the table wil<lb/>
 got to get one for the road"<lb/>
While on the subject of stin<lb/>
methods to refresh, it is inevitable to CO!<lb/>
ment on the tepid tea we receive in the cafi<lb/>
teria. Hot tea is one thing, iced tea is anoth<lb/>
and lukewarm tea is still another thinj<lb/>
the time you struggle through on<lb/>
lines with others who are enduring a similar<lb/>
torture and reach a suitable table with a<lb/>
giant fan overhead, and as you explore the<lb/>
possibilities of your meal, you discover a<lb/>
glass full of brown liquid with a suggestion<lb/>
of a frail crystal of ice bobbing near the sur-<lb/>
face. It disappears. What it is that you hae<lb/>
is 'tepid tea<lb/>
Time is drawing near to tuck away the<lb/>
aspirins and nerve pills and to wish everyone<lb/>
a nappy month and a half of summer vacation.<lb/>
We will bring this session to a close with a<lb/>
thought to ponder from Peony by Perl Buck.<lb/>
"If one can overcome poverty and love in<lb/>
moderation, there is no obstacle to happiness<lb/>
Traffic Warnings<lb/>
Seem Unheeded<lb/>
Millions of column inches of valu-<lb/>
able space are contributed by Amer-<lb/>
ican newspapers every year in the<lb/>
never ending battle to halt the bloody<lb/>
carnage taking place on our high-<lb/>
ways. It seems incredible that drivers<lb/>
continue to act as they do behind the<lb/>
wheel of an automobile despite the<lb/>
avalanche of grim facts and warning.<lb/>
But it is a matter of record; record<lb/>
that is slightly over 50 years old yet<lb/>
already stands as one of the more<lb/>
sordid indictments against our society.<lb/>
A recent report by The Travelers<lb/>
Insurance Companies states that since<lb/>
the advent of the automobile, more<lb/>
than 62,000,000 men, women and<lb/>
children have been killed or injured<lb/>
on our highways. More Americans<lb/>
have died on our highways than in<lb/>
all wars this country has fought.<lb/>
More than 85 percent of the 37,600<lb/>
ceaths occurred because somebody<lb/>
behind the wheel had shrugged off<lb/>
the countless highway safety news<lb/>
stories and editorials this newspaper<lb/>
and hundreds of others like it across<lb/>
the country printed during the year.<lb/>
"It can't happen to me he thought.<lb/>
Perhaps he didn't consicously think<lb/>
'hat. Maybe the fact that it could<lb/>
happen to him didn't get past his<lb/>
sub-conscious. Perhaps it never did<lb/>
happen to hhn. Perhaps he was the<lb/>
survivor in a horrible crash that<lb/>
maimed and killed those he loved<lb/>
most.<lb/>
Inattention is the overwhelming<lb/>
factor which fiirures in 35 percent of<lb/>
our death crashes. A lapse of atten-<lb/>
tion to the road ahead, a heavy foot<lb/>
on the gas pedal, an unnecessary<lb/>
gamble to save a few seconds that<lb/>
cost an eternitythese are the ways<lb/>
in which the human behind the wheel<lb/>
failed. The supreme penalty was the<lb/>
result for those who erred once too<lb/>
often.<lb/>
Although 3.000,000 copies of the<lb/>
report by The Travelers Insurance<lb/>
Companies described the sordid record<lb/>
on our highways last year are being<lb/>
distributed in this country, chances<lb/>
are that you will not see one. If fm<lb/>
do however, read H closely.<lb/>
It is safe to predict that you as a<lb/>
driver will be exposed to countless<lb/>
news stories in this newspaper during<lb/>
the coming months describing what<lb/>
happened because the human behind<lb/>
the wheel made a mistake. Read them<lb/>
carefully. They could help you avoid<lb/>
that same mistake.<lb/>
Registration Exists As<lb/>
Comforting Thought Now<lb/>
By ROY MARTIN<lb/>
Three more days and it will be oer for<lb/>
about three hours. In case you are wondering<lb/>
about to what I am refering course it is this<lb/>
session of summer school. The three hour<lb/>
rest period to which I am also refering is<lb/>
the three hours it will take to get through<lb/>
the registration line.<lb/>
July 4th came and went once again. As<lb/>
each year passes, the day which is supposed<lb/>
to mean so much in American History and<lb/>
in the lives of Americans passes without<lb/>
much patriotic spirit prevailing. This is a<lb/>
shame. When America is faced with threats<lb/>
from Communism at every turn . . . and the<lb/>
American way of life is being threatened<lb/>
with extinction . . . the only thing that people<lb/>
think about is how long it will take to get<lb/>
to the beach, and how long it will take to get<lb/>
back.<lb/>
One thing which is really interesting<lb/>
about summer school is the people who are<lb/>
in attendance.<lb/>
For example  in one class there is a<lb/>
girl who is definitely not a regular East<lb/>
Carolina student . . . and if you don't be-<lb/>
lieve it, just ask here . . . she'lf tell you.<lb/>
Actually, though she really doesn't have<lb/>
to tell you, because you can spot her a mile<lb/>
away. It seems that either this young lady<lb/>
has some kind of eye trouble, or she has a<lb/>
chronic case of bloodshotness. (A Word?)<lb/>
Anyway whatever she has  she covers her<lb/>
eyes with sun glasses in class, and outside<lb/>
of class, at all times . . . and even when it<lb/>
rains.<lb/>
Whenever yousee a column in any paper<lb/>
broken up into sections in the fashion that<lb/>
this one is . . . you know one thing  the<lb/>
writer didn't have a thing to say, and he<lb/>
is doing the best he can, which isn't too much.<lb/>
After fighting gnats, heat, monsoons,<lb/>
figures (matheraaitjical), and a few more<lb/>
things that Greenville has to offer the sum-<lb/>
mer college student  you are left just a<lb/>
little drained.<lb/>
And so therefore  a a remedy, I<lb/>
suggest that you find yourself a tropical isle<lb/>
somewhere in the South Pacific area with<lb/>
two trees. The island is designed to be your<lb/>
sole domain  and the two trees are to tie<lb/>
the hammock.<lb/>
Now, after you have the two important<lb/>
items . . . then sign a contract with the most<lb/>
requent trading schooner in order to obtain<lb/>
the necessary supplies (?)  and then,<lb/>
brother, just lie in that hammock and don't<lb/>
worry about a tiling.<lb/>
mnnwi<lb/>
<pb facs="00038666_0003"/><lb/>
ag-BSPAY, JULY<lb/>
7, 1940<lb/>
HEA Reports OvercrowdinJirt. Roosevelt<lb/>
In Public Elementary Schools Supports Kennedy<lb/>
Ani Stevenson<lb/>
BAST CilOCINIAM<lb/>
PAGE THREE<lb/>
id of a million pupils<lb/>
anentary schools were on<lb/>
i during the iy59-0<lb/>
M leiently reported ty<lb/>
N ,  Education Association<lb/>
 o million others were<lb/>
rowdfag in class-<lb/>
mare than 35 pupils each,<lb/>
said. There were 290 clas-<lb/>
' more pupils.<lb/>
ntf urged a tnaic-<lb/>
per classroom in<lb/>
 ipila<lb/>
 lades, to provide tite<lb/>
nor individual atten-<lb/>
 ftt-n reached in city<lb/>
now practical jjoal is<lb/>
ved more thah<lb/>
en in urban eiemen-<lb/>
( H the more than 2<lb/>
sssea of more than<lb/>
0 K) in hie of more<lb/>
BOM than 71.000 in<lb/>
 :han M<lb/>
tary school children<lb/>
! a f: ir educational<lb/>
' . the excessive over-<lb/>
t he NKA report<lb/>
corollary is equally<lb/>
rvpetent teachers ire<lb/>
vppoi tunity to give<lb/>
. p to mall children by<lb/>
rw  sity of sa-<lb/>
ils to a class<lb/>
Ireti in tliies of more<lb/>
regrouped into class-<lb/>
i require 28.290 ad-<lb/>
ms and teachers.<lb/>
ky figures and do not<lb/>
si   <lb/>
 report noted that the<lb/>
in (trie bi group, but<lb/>
 many different buildings. Thug<lb/>
ll arroup .11 the children would re-<lb/>
W many more new room and<lb/>
teachers than estimated above<lb/>
 the other hand, many of the<lb/>
d.atrteta may have only a few child-<lb/>
i over the 33-pupii standard.<lb/>
I he survey showed that the largest<lb/>
 are to be found in the South-<lb/>
fin States.<lb/>
condensed from the (harlo'te<lb/>
News and Observer<lb/>
Products MakesDebut<lb/>
A new type retractable car antenna<lb/>
which moves up or down automatical-<lb/>
'y whenever the car radio is switched<lb/>
w or off, has been placed on the<lb/>
n aiket by Marueno Seisakusho Com-<lb/>
I-any, Ltd. No. 217 Nakazato-cho, Ki-<lb/>
taku. Tokyo.<lb/>
The relay working the electric<lb/>
switch controlling the antenna use on-<lb/>
v 150 milliamperes of electric power,<lb/>
tins placing very little extra load on<lb/>
the circuit which supplies the radio,<lb/>
according to the company.<lb/>
Misono Chemical Company, Ltd<lb/>
No. ,17 Konya-cho, Kanda, Chiyoda-ku,<lb/>
Tokyo, is offering a new laundry<lb/>
starefe which -omes in white sheets<lb/>
rhiefl have tho exact aippeareance of<lb/>
 :per but which dissolve instantly in<lb/>
nater.<lb/>
The company describes the starch<lb/>
as a chemically treated pure vegetable<lb/>
fiber which it says gives the laundry<lb/>
a pure white finish and makes syn-<lb/>
thetic fibers dirt resistant and more<lb/>
comfortable to wear.<lb/>
Jetra News Bulletin, N. Y.<lb/>
Is This Fair?<lb/>
Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt is<lb/>
ready to work foe a Stevenson-Ken-<lb/>
tdy combination on the national<lb/>
democratic ticket in th November<lb/>
election, and she will "probably' at-<lb/>
tend the convention at which the<lb/>
party names its candidates.<lb/>
In the course of her political pro-<lb/>
nouncements, Mrs. Roosevelt termed<lb/>
Vice-President Richard M. Nixon,<lb/>
potential tRepublican candidate "an<lb/>
opportunist and untrustworthy She<lb/>
added that a good politician knows<lb/>
when to do things, but this is being<lb/>
an opportunist.<lb/>
She clarified her statement that<lb/>
dlai E, Stevenson actually is a can-<lb/>
didate for the Democratic presidential<lb/>
nomination pointing out that he said<lb/>
he would not fai! to respond to a call<lb/>
to service from his party, and also<lb/>
that in many places now, signatures<lb/>
:or the Stevenson candidacy are be-<lb/>
ing sought. The combination of the<lb/>
move to ask him and his willingness<lb/>
to respond if asked, she said, makes<lb/>
nim virtually a candidate.<lb/>
Mrs. Roosevelt explained her views<lb/>
on the candidacy of Senator John F.<lb/>
Kennedy of Massachusetts in the fol-<lb/>
'owing manner.<lb/>
"No citizen should be barred from<lb/>
elective office in this country be-<lb/>
cause of his religion because we are<lb/>
n democracy. But if any religion does<lb/>
things one disapproves of and allows<lb/>
its spiritual i'dance to become a<lb/>
political factor, then the citizen have<lb/>
a right to protest.<lb/>
condensed from The Christian<lb/>
Science Monitor.<lb/>
Foreign Language Department<lb/>
Installs Electronic Laboratory<lb/>
"Perhaps the most significant single<lb/>
accomplishment of the department of<lb/>
foreign language during this year has<lb/>
been the completion of plans for and<lb/>
the installation of a small, but mod-<lb/>
ern electronic laboratory announced<lb/>
Mr. James Fleming, director of the<lb/>
foreign language department.<lb/>
During first session of summer<lb/>
school a laboratory for foreign lang-<lb/>
uage students was completed in Gra-<lb/>
ham building. Students in French,<lb/>
Spanish, and German classes have<lb/>
begun listening and recording ses-<lb/>
sions. At present the laboratory is<lb/>
equipped to handle 18 students.<lb/>
Humber Helped<lb/>
According to Mr. Fleming, the col-<lb/>
lege has Dr. Robert Humber, county<lb/>
senator, to thank for the insta'lation.<lb/>
Three days before the legislature<lb/>
closed Dr. Humber was able to get the<lb/>
bill passed. .<lb/>
"A lot of planning, research, and<lb/>
travel to other colleges contributed<lb/>
to this modern laboratory stated<lb/>
Mr. Fleming. "And without the heln<lb/>
of the entire foreign language depart-<lb/>
ment and Dr. J. D. Messick, former<lb/>
ECC President, who submitted the<lb/>
official request, the project could not<lb/>
have been completed<lb/>
The first official request was sent<lb/>
to Dr. Messick March 14 1958 stati ig<lb/>
the cost (over $12,000), kind of equip-<lb/>
ment needed, and reasons for the need,<lb/>
but even after i.he reqquest was ma le<lb/>
't was several months later before leg-<lb/>
islature acted.<lb/>
Modern Methods<lb/>
"There have been many complaints<lb/>
made by various administrators about<lb/>
the lack of teaching oral language"<lb/>
Mr. Fleming said, "and we believe<lb/>
that having a laboratory will help<lb/>
tremendously in a student's under-<lb/>
standing and speaking foreign<lb/>
language<lb/>
The lab is set up in row fashion and<lb/>
each booth is used by only one stj-<lb/>
dent. Persons recording Spanish do<lb/>
not conflict with someone in the next<lb/>
booth listening to French or German.<lb/>
An entire row or only one person<lb/>
can listen to tape and the teacher in<lb/>
charge can lbten to each student<lb/>
separately white he is recording. "In<lb/>
comparison with the laboratories seen<lb/>
at other colleges, I believe that ours<lb/>
if one of the best in operation Mr.<lb/>
Fleming said.<lb/>
"Although 'he lab is in operation<lb/>
the work has just begun. The faculty<lb/>
members are now npending a great<lb/>
deal of time familiarizing themselves<lb/>
with the operation of the equipment<lb/>
Mrs. Marguerite Perry is working<lb/>
on a manual of exercises and Mr.<lb/>
Robert R. Morrison is recording suit-<lb/>
able tapes, both of which will be used<lb/>
in the laboratory.<lb/>
Not Permanent<lb/>
"Actually the laboratory is not in-<lb/>
stalled permanently as there are a<lb/>
iot of bugs to be erased, such as the<lb/>
addition of acoustical treatment. We<lb/>
hope to expand next year and move<lb/>
to a larger room continued Mr.<lb/>
Fleming, "the equipment we have is<lb/>
40od and the booths are excellent and<lb/>
we believe that this new operation is<lb/>
and wi'l be a benefit to the students<lb/>
takine foreign language<lb/>
NEW FOREIGN LANGUAGE LAB  is in use daih by students wishing<lb/>
to improve their foreign language skill.<lb/>
nv i IIH IIKIF.D ST I DENTS . . . demonstrate the difference in<lb/>
Hearing apparel for men and women students seen on our campus during<lb/>
the past two weeks. <lb/>
Boston College Trains Students<lb/>
To Become Mobility Specialists<lb/>
 tudents are being asked to<lb/>
 "new Profession" -mobll-<lb/>
who will be trained<lb/>
the blind.<lb/>
T field of instruction will<lb/>
I irated at Boston College,<lb/>
 Hill, Mass in a M-mon-th<lb/>
heymning June 27, 1960.<lb/>
J ti forms may be obtained<lb/>
 th Runci, Boston College,<lb/>
Hill 07, Massachusetts.<lb/>
program will produce teach-<lb/>
vill instruct blind men and<lb/>
alk more easily and with<lb/>
rfety Mr. Runci announced.<lb/>
will learn not only new<lb/>
of instruction, but a'so the<lb/>
'atui f the human senses and of<lb/>
Inesa itself<lb/>
Eligible are college students who<lb/>
earned their bachelor's degrees<lb/>
ani are in good health, of good moral<lb/>
'Wscter, and with visual acuity co-<lb/>
recta ble to 20-20.<lb/>
Each traineeship is In the amount<lb/>
of $3800, covering full tuition and<lb/>
living costs for the 14-month course.<lb/>
The curriculum will include psy-<lb/>
chology of learning, abnormal psycho-<lb/>
logy, orientation to work with the<lb/>
blind, dynamics of blindness and re-<lb/>
habilitation, nature and training of<lb/>
human senses, medical aspects of re-<lb/>
habilitation of the blind, human be-<lb/>
havior and case work principles.<lb/>
Weekly semiaars with medical, edu-<lb/>
cational and social work experts as<lb/>
well as observation and clinical ex-<lb/>
periences wflh the blind are an inte-<lb/>
gral jvart of the program.<lb/>
Graduates of the course will be<lb/>
granted a Master in Education degree<lb/>
and will be prepared for careers at<lb/>
.ehabilitotion centers, schools, a"d<lb/>
public and private agencies for the<lb/>
blind. <lb/>
kkm Mills Rob<lb/>
Gullible Students<lb/>
Phony and worthless college "de-<lb/>
crees sold through the mail, are<lb/>
robbing the gullible in the United<lb/>
States and abroad of an estimated<lb/>
 million dollars a year.<lb/>
This is revealed in "Diploma Mills-<lb/>
Vmerica's Educational Underworld<lb/>
a June Reader's Digest article ly<lb/>
Ronald Schillp? He cites examples<lb/>
iif fraud in California, Hawaii, Mis-<lb/>
souri, Idaho; New Jersey, and many<lb/>
c ther states.<lb/>
"When I app'ied for a degree at<lb/>
vTcKinley-Roosi'velt University, n<lb/>
Chicago. 1 was offered almost any<lb/>
degree I wanted- for $100 says<lb/>
Schiller. "1 asked about the courses<lb/>
fen be taken and the 'president' re-<lb/>
plied: "That will take you too much<lb/>
time. Why don't you take your de-<lb/>
gree now and get your education<lb/>
later? I'll recommend some books to<lb/>
read<lb/>
One diploma mill adviseR that "di-<lb/>
plomas can be back-dated several<lb/>
tars if you wishto show that you<lb/>
'  had your training years ago<lb/>
i I have lots of experience<lb/>
The Digest article declares that the<lb/>
fraud b'comes really dangerous when<lb/>
the degree! "confer the privilege" of<lb/>
rtirin on the fringes of medicine<lb/>
and psychological counseling. A les-<lb/>
ion mailed by the iCollege of Divine<lb/>
Metaphysics in Indianapolis states:<lb/>
"There is no reality in tumor or can-<lb/>
cer. People with these diseases are<lb/>
in a state of hynosis. The practition-<lb/>
er must use kill and strategy in<lb/>
aiding theipatient to be dehypnotized<lb/>
In the six months' since the Amer-<lb/>
ican Council on Education issued a<lb/>
report on diploma mills, reports Schil-<lb/>
ler, various government bodies have<lb/>
'ilren steps to eliminate them. Un-<lb/>
til this is accomplished, degree seek<lb/>
ers are warned to ignore offers or<lb/>
or "quick-way" education.<lb/>
Political Parties Draw Up<lb/>
Platforms To Suit Masses<lb/>
The Democratic and Republican<lb/>
patties have been drawing up cam-<lb/>
paign platforms every four years for<lb/>
a hundred year or better. Every one<lb/>
oi those platfVms has been "in the<lb/>
oest interest of the people"but just<lb/>
what that phrase means has changed<lb/>
a good deal over the years.<lb/>
When many of today's political<lb/>
thinkers refer to "the people  whit<lb/>
they have in mind is the whole of<lb/>
society. They think of people as a<lb/>
groupa concept indistinguishable<lb/>
. rom the Marxist idea of "the masses<lb/>
In contrast, the American political<lb/>
tradition has always conceived of "the<lb/>
people" as individuals, ear endowed<lb/>
with supreme and equal worth by<lb/>
(od. This revolutionary idea that<lb/>
each person has certain rights de-<lb/>
prived from an Authority higher than<lb/>
my government was proclaimed in<lb/>
the Declaration of Independence and<lb/>
written into the Constitution. On it<lb/>
;mericans founded a nation in which<lb/>
government was to be the servant of<lb/>
the people rather than their master.<lb/>
A close look at the iplatforms com-<lb/>
ing from the political conventions<lb/>
lids month will show how the party<lb/>
leaders interpret the word "people<lb/>
If they make large promises of more<lb/>
federal duties, powers and programs,<lb/>
watch out. Collectivization of power<lb/>
in a big central government is in the<lb/>
Marxist manner. Political leaders who<lb/>
want to protect the American herit-<lb/>
age of persona! rights and freedoms<lb/>
wi!l advocate keeping as much gov-<lb/>
ernment as possible at the local levels<lb/>
where each individual can keep an<lb/>
eye on it and make his voice heard.<lb/>
-Industrial Press Service.<lb/>
Congress Discusses<lb/>
Wage Increase<lb/>
Veteran News<lb/>
"easy"<lb/>
VA Questions<lb/>
QIn the last few years VA has<lb/>
heen paying me my GI insurance<lb/>
dividents in cash. I have one coming<lb/>
in soon, and understand I can leave<lb/>
it with VA as a credit, to pay prem-<lb/>
iums in case I should miss one. Will<lb/>
you explain how this works?<lb/>
AlDividends left with VA as a<lb/>
credit draw interest and will be used<lb/>
by VA to pay one monthly premium<lb/>
at a time in case you should fail to<lb/>
make your premium payment before<lb/>
the end of the Slday grace period.<lb/>
Von must, of course, have earned<lb/>
dividend money in your account be-<lb/>
fore this can be done.<lb/>
QI am now receiving pensian<lb/>
fiom the VA, and have a right 4j<lb/>
switch to the new system of pay-<lb/>
ments which starts July 1. If I de-<lb/>
eld I want to switch over, do I have<lb/>
'( make the change before July 1?<lb/>
ANo. You may make the change<lb/>
't any time. However, once you make<lb/>
it, your decision is final. You can't<lb/>
change back. So be sure you're right.<lb/>
J ee your nearest VA office if you<lb/>
need help. <lb/>
QJ understand that there have<lb/>
been some changes in the income lim-<lb/>
itation for veterans eligible for pen-<lb/>
ion. Will you explain the changes<lb/>
to me?<lb/>
AUnder present law a veteran<lb/>
who has more than $1400 annual in-<lb/>
come and no dependents cannot quali-<lb/>
fy for pension. If he is married or nas<lb/>
a minor child, his income cannot be<lb/>
more than $2700. The new pension<lb/>
law, effective July 1, increases the<lb/>
amount of income a veteran can have,<lb/>
and still collect ipension. A veteran<lb/>
with no dependents is allowed up to<lb/>
$1800 income, and up to $3000 if he<lb/>
has dependents.<lb/>
Students vs. Watermelon<lb/>
Student job seekers are amone<lb/>
those who will suffer most if Con-<lb/>
gress tampers with the minimum<lb/>
uge law me Chamber of Commerce<lb/>
oi the United States reports.<lb/>
The low productive workers would<lb/>
bt most vulnerable to work-saving<lb/>
device which an increase in fee<lb/>
minimum would encourage, the Na<lb/>
tional Chamber points out.<lb/>
Unemployment in the nation as<lb/>
.i whole is now about 5 per cent of j<lb/>
the work force, but among laborers<lb/>
and non-whites it is twice that rate,<lb/>
fhey have difficulty finding jobs at<lb/>
the present minimum, and they would<lb/>
have more difficulty if the minimum<lb/>
.vere increased, the National Cham-<lb/>
ber said.<lb/>
The National Chamber pointed out<lb/>
tl at four years ago the minimum was<lb/>
75 cents an hour. It was raised to<lb/>
1 an hour. Now iCongress is talking<lb/>
of boosting it to $1.25, a 66 per cent<lb/>
increase in a little more than four<lb/>
years. The increase is far beyond the<lb/>
rise in labor productivity in the same<lb/>
period.<lb/>
The wage fixing for millions of<lb/>
employees could spur inflation as<lb/>
veil as unemployment, tihe National<lb/>
Chamber noted. Wage fixing does<lb/>
not stop at the minimum. It goes<lb/>
light up the line; employes prize and<lb/>
desire pay that reflects different<lb/>
; kills they have developed. Wide-<lb/>
spread wage increases cause general<lb/>
price increases. This is nothing less<lb/>
than inflation.<lb/>
Z Neighbors<lb/>
rt&amp;<lb/>
Drill Refusal<lb/>
Crises Suspension<lb/>
(UPS) Hunter College Dean of<lb/>
vtii('pnf Harry Levy invoked an on-<lb/>
Ibe spat four-day suspension from<lb/>
dasi for Bronx sophomore Toby<lb/>
Berman for her refusal to take cover<lb/>
during tie nationwide civil defense<lb/>
trill held 'ii.eay, May 3.<lb/>
The apension came after the<lb/>
Dean had warned students in a let-<lb/>
ter posted on May 2, that, while "the<lb/>
College has no quarrel with the stu-<lb/>
dent's desire to express a strong pro-<lb/>
test against any procedure which<lb/>
they feel is morally indefensible the<lb/>
administration,  . . responsible to<lb/>
City, State and Federal authorities<lb/>
could not permit defiance of these<lb/>
authorities. The letter specified the<lb/>
four-day suspension from class as the<lb/>
enalty for disobedience.<lb/>
When the sirens sounded at 2:15<lb/>
on Tuesday afternoon, six students<lb/>
stood their ground by the flagpole<lb/>
and in Student Hall. Dean Levy per-<lb/>
sonally explained the regulation and<lb/>
the penalty for disobedience, and of-<lb/>
fered to communicate their protest<lb/>
to higher authorities. He permitted<lb/>
them to participate in the drill "under<lb/>
protest and five students accepted<lb/>
this course of action. Toby refused<lb/>
to move, and Dean Levy informed<lb/>
her of her suspension.<lb/>
Jack Newfield, ARROW night edi-<lb/>
tor, went to City College where 350<lb/>
students massed in protest during<lb/>
the drill. He gave as his reasons for<lb/>
the action "a desire to stand on the<lb/>
City College campus where dissent<lb/>
and protest are tolerated, and no one<lb/>
is prejudged and pre-sentenced before<lb/>
a law is broken City College au-<lb/>
thorities have not yet announced<lb/>
their plan of action on the protest.<lb/>
During the bomb drill CCNY au-<lb/>
thorities circulated among the pro-<lb/>
testants, collecting student ID cards.<lb/>
Anne-Marie Mueser and Norm Ad-<lb/>
ler, two Hunterites who had planned<lb/>
to protest, but didn't, stated that "the<lb/>
Dean's letter had not influenced"<lb/>
them. But that other forces, such as<lb/>
parental pressure, had played a part<lb/>
in their decision.<lb/>
"Why take vitamins? They<lb/>
io&amp;i make you feel better so<lb/>
c-u can worry<lb/>
Busy Driver Aid<lb/>
1. Cigarette CaseLighter for the<lb/>
Busy Driver.<lb/>
Press-A-Light, an automatic light-<lb/>
ing unit built into a compact cigar-<lb/>
ette case, may be the answer to the<lb/>
busy motorist who smokes while<lb/>
driving.<lb/>
Recently placed on sale by the<lb/>
Jsuzu Motor Company of Tokyo, te<lb/>
jnit, which is designed for attach-<lb/>
ment on the dashboard alongside the<lb/>
driver's seat, is a combination cigar-<lb/>
ette case that holds 20 cigarettes, in-<lb/>
corporating an automatic lighting<lb/>
element. At the touch of a button, a<lb/>
cigarette is released from the case,<lb/>
placed in position and automatically<lb/>
lighted.<lb/>
about taxes<lb/>
hflfi tr<lb/>
H (.<lb/>
(ioes To College.<lb/>
ENJOYING THE ICE COLD WATERMELON . . . served at one of the<lb/>
recent College Union sponsored watermelon cuts are Mary Etta Dunn,<lb/>
Sara McCorkle, and Sue Walker.<lb/>
SPECIAL SUMMER RATES<lb/>
THE COLLEGIATE<lb/>
402 Holly Street<lb/>
20 Rooms for College Boys<lb/>
Only y Block from Main Campus<lb/>
Reasonable: Only $23.00 Per Session<lb/>
Semi-Private Bath For All Rooms<lb/>
Contact Rill Collins, PLaza 6-9962<lb/>
402 Holly Street<lb/>
Delicious Food<lb/>
Served 24 Hours<lb/>
Air Conditioned<lb/>
CAROLINA<lb/>
GRILL<lb/>
Corner W. 9th &amp; Dickinson<lb/>
FRIDAY - SATURDAY<lb/>
July 8 and 9<lb/>
Fight Against Organized Crime<lb/>
INSIDE THE<lb/>
MAFIA<lb/>
m<lb/>
tJA .id<lb/>
uma<lb/>
'JOHANSSON<lb/>
' PAlItRSON<lb/>
FIGHT<lb/>
FILMS!<lb/>
Starts SUNDAY, July 10<lb/>
la Color<lb/>
"HANNIBAL<lb/>
Starring Vetor Mature<lb/>
PITT Theatre<lb/>
'<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00038666_0004"/><lb/>
PAOS FOUR<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SPORTS<lb/>
CHATTER<lb/>
By BILL BOYD<lb/>
I<lb/>
j<lb/>
I<lb/>
l<lb/>
If there were five million baseball fans watching television on Satur-<lb/>
day then there were five million mad and highly indignant fana when<lb/>
the ninth inning was half over. <lb/>
No other television network to my knowledge, has ever<lb/>
made a farce or travesty out ot a sporting event such as The Columbia<lb/>
Broadcasting System has done on two particular occasions. Mr. Gerome<lb/>
Herman "Dizzy" Dean griped and complained to no end several weeks ago<lb/>
about a similar situation as the one .Saturday.<lb/>
To recollect briefly what occurred on Saturday, the Yankees were<lb/>
behind Detroit bv a margin of 6-4. With Roger Maris coming to hat in<lb/>
the list half of the iHh inning, CBS took the shocked viewer o California<lb/>
to view the Olympic tuals. Meanwhile the viewer had to wonder "what<lb/>
hoppened In Sunday Morning's sports section of his loyal paper he found<lb/>
out if he missed the late evening sports wrap-up the preceding evening.<lb/>
Maria grounded out. Hen a was put out and then Bill Skowron homered.<lb/>
With the scow now 6 to 5. McDougald tripled, Art Ditmar doubled, Joe<lb/>
Demastri singled and the ball game was over. The Yanks won 7 to 6. A<lb/>
wonderful buildup to a wonderful let down. This was the way CBS handled<lb/>
it.<lb/>
About three weeks ago CBS had a Yankee game scheduled when the<lb/>
rains came. Damn and Reese adlibbed for about 15 minutes and the game<lb/>
started. The rains came and the viewer was taken to Cleveland for<lb/>
alternate game in case of rain.<lb/>
Widgeon Stars<lb/>
In Slow Pitch<lb/>
Softball Action<lb/>
i<lb/>
Alter watching Cleveland and Detroit do<lb/>
battle foi an inning or so the poor fan watching TV found himself back at<lb/>
Yankee Stadium where the rains had now stopped. After watching several<lb/>
innings of the ChicagoNew York contest it rained some more. By now<lb/>
Dizzy Dean moaning about the situation to no avail. When the cameras<lb/>
in New York were turned off in favor of the ones in Cleveland again, I<lb/>
stopped watching and turned to a good western. The hero in the story was<lb/>
not quite as fast moving his gun as the engineer in New York was with<lb/>
the switch on the lighted panel.<lb/>
Not Fair To The Viewer<lb/>
The American public buys products advertised on TV. It is in this<lb/>
manner that TV is allowed to survive. The viewer pays for the toll game,<lb/>
the late movie or the soap opera indirectly but he still pays. CBS should<lb/>
not switch athletic contests like this. Very few people will want to give up<lb/>
one sport, after interest is built up, in favor of another Your local tele-<lb/>
vision station has nothing to do with the situation. I suggest you write to<lb/>
TBS Sports if you desire to see some good baseball, football, basketball,<lb/>
golf, the Olympics, etc because they will not be worth seeing with the<lb/>
speculation that you as viewed might have the event taken from you at<lb/>
any moment. The address is 485 Madison Ave New York 22, N. Y.<lb/>
Local Sports<lb/>
While talking to coaches, faculty members, teachers and students<lb/>
around campus, you come upon some interesting facts. One is that Mr.<lb/>
Archie Brigman's Hobbton High School basketball team won the hard<lb/>
court championsrip for the state during last year's season. Coach Brigman<lb/>
hits a softball with the energetic composure that he mixes with coaching<lb/>
too. He slammed out three long home runs on Monday when The Old Grads<lb/>
played The Scoffers in two slow pitch softball games.<lb/>
Haupt At V. Of Tennessee<lb/>
Mr. Dale Haupt. presently an ECC student working on his M. A.<lb/>
Degree has been offered the freshman Une coaching job at the University<lb/>
of Tennessee. This offer was made to him by one of his old friends, Mr.<lb/>
Bow den Wyatt. Coach Wyatt is the athletic director there. Haupt has had<lb/>
professional experience with the Creenbay Packers, he is a personal friend<lb/>
of Pete Radamacher and coached high school football in Florida last year.<lb/>
He expects to sign the contract shortly. Haupt is a native of Wisconsin.<lb/>
Another coach pursuing the II. A. Degree here for the second straight<lb/>
summer is George MacMillan. He is now two-thirds through. He coaches<lb/>
at Gordon Military College, Barnesville, Ga. He is the backfield coach in<lb/>
football, head basketball and tennis coach. George is married and the father<lb/>
of a boy and a girl.<lb/>
Not Enough Activities <lb/>
One student recently remarked that he feels there wer not enough<lb/>
activities offered during the first summer session. I quickly found that he<lb/>
had not been reading. Monday the College Union sponsored a free water-<lb/>
melon cutting and a free weiner roast, During the watermelon feast there<lb/>
were two softball games being played on the nearby athletic fields. Free<lb/>
"Putt-Putt' golf and free use of the driving range was offered to ECC<lb/>
students on Tuesday afternoon for five hours. There was a free movie<lb/>
on Tuesday night. There were also two softball games played on Monday<lb/>
and Tuesday evenings at 6 p.m. This did not phase this particular student<lb/>
and after observing his physiological structure, I decided that he liked<lb/>
horizona! lab better than anything regardless of what was offered.<lb/>
Finally Met The Requirements!<lb/>
It has been fifteen very hard quarters for me here at East Caro-<lb/>
lina. Some of us possess a very high I. Q. and do not have to study bard<lb/>
Some of us possess an average I. Q. and have to study very hard. I am of<lb/>
the latter class. Until last summer I enjoyed this college for 14 straight<lb/>
quarters. This is my fifth summer school and I sincerely will hate to leave<lb/>
next Tuesday. Many perhaps do not realize that I am spending some of my<lb/>
slowly earned furlough days to come to college this session. I am on of-<lb/>
ficial leave from my unit, the United States Army Hospital at Fort Lee,<lb/>
Virginia. I will return to duty on Tuesday with six more hours behind me<lb/>
and a statement that I met the requirements for the M. A. Degree. After<lb/>
being on duty in the Army as an officer for one year, after being here for<lb/>
3l- straight years, you gain more insight as to what type of college your3<lb/>
is. In Texas last fall many students questioned me about this college. I<lb/>
met a Captain there who had graduated from here. He informed me that<lb/>
no other institution could have prepared him any better for the type of<lb/>
work he was doing. He worked in the education center at Fort Sam Houston.<lb/>
My work is administrative in nature. I have a company size unit of<lb/>
enlisted men under my supervision at the hospital at Fort Lee. I also ad-<lb/>
ministratively control two dispensaries plus many other detailed jobs which<lb/>
are thrown at youne- Lieutenants. Regardless of my prior enlisted service<lb/>
or any other training I encountered, I must truthfully admit that it was<lb/>
here on this campus where I obtained the facts, the techniques, and the<lb/>
general "know how" that is helping me to do my job today.<lb/>
Mr. Willie James Hester has worked at this college for approxi-<lb/>
mately 14 years. He is the colored gentleman who works under Mr. Mahlon<lb/>
Coles in the Student Union. He has seen many students come and go in<lb/>
his time here. There is Rowland, the elderly colored gentleman who works<lb/>
in the janitorial service of Wright Bui'ding. I have grown to realize that<lb/>
as a student here I took people like these for granted. I took our fine build-<lb/>
ings for granted and I even took some of my grades for granted too.<lb/>
Returning to our beautiful campus for these short five weeks made<lb/>
me realize just how fortunate we are to be able to attend such a college.<lb/>
Perhaps I will not remain in the military and will attempt to pursue a career<lb/>
in teaching. If so I will probably return here for other courses within the<lb/>
next five to ten years. But if I remain in the Army I doubt if I shall ever<lb/>
be able to return. Military courses will take place of civilian courses. If I<lb/>
wrote five columns this size I would not be able to state my thanks, my<lb/>
gratitude, my feelings and my wishes, to those administrators, faculty mem-<lb/>
bers and workers of this college who have been so very kind to me. You do<lb/>
not forget men like Dr. Leo Jenkins, Dr. James Tucker, Dr. Doug Jones,<lb/>
Dr. Ed Carter, Dr. Ed Hirshberg, Dr. Clinton Prewett, Dr. J. L. Oppelt, Dr.<lb/>
N. M. JoTgenson, Dr. Jim Butler, Mr. James Mal'ory, Dr. John Home, Mr.<lb/>
F. D. Duncan, Mr. Earl Smith, Mr. Paul Julian, Mr. Mahlon Coles, Miss<lb/>
NeU Stallings, Miss Cynthia Mendenhall. Dr. Hubert Coleman, Dr. Ray<lb/>
Martinez, Dr. Wel'ington Gray, Mr. Howard Porter, Dr. John Reynolds, and<lb/>
about twenty-five more it has been my pleasure to have known. You hate to<lb/>
part from college friends like Clint LeGette, Bob Patterson, Jess Curry,<lb/>
Robert Powers, John Hudson, Dale Haupt, Charlie Bishop, Jim Henderson<lb/>
Mr. Sherman M. Parks and many others. You see guys like Jim Speight,<lb/>
Hill Widgeon, a slim graduate stu-<lb/>
dent, led his "Has Beens slow pitch<lb/>
softball team to two big victories last<lb/>
week to clinch the first place champ-<lb/>
ionship in League A,<lb/>
The ten man squad ended up with<lb/>
a perfect 6 and 0 record during the<lb/>
regular schedule. The Has Beens bat-<lb/>
tled off a stubborn Athletics team<lb/>
during an extra inning affair last<lb/>
Wednesday to win by a score of 7 to 0.<lb/>
The winning tally came when Bill<lb/>
Boyd singled, Jess Curry singled,<lb/>
sending Boyd to third and Joe Holmes<lb/>
doubled. Boyd scampered home with<lb/>
the winning marker. Bill Widgeon did<lb/>
the real damage though in poking out<lb/>
a triple and a towering home run to<lb/>
drive in four big runs.<lb/>
The Has Boens slaughtered the<lb/>
Athletics in th second game of the<lb/>
evening as the score was'22 to 1 in<lb/>
favor of the champions when umpire<lb/>
Best called the contest. Wigeon and<lb/>
Russell hammered out home runs in<lb/>
ihis one, and every man on the club<lb/>
obtained at least two hits. Some bril-<lb/>
liant fielding by Jess Curry, Bill<lb/>
Boyd and Buc footballer Mac Seymour<lb/>
highlighted defensive action for both<lb/>
games. Second sacker Jim Barnes hit<lb/>
a solo blast for the Athletic's only<lb/>
homer of the day. Third baseman N.<lb/>
Hester was outstanding on defense.<lb/>
Other action in League A during<lb/>
lust week saw The Duffers and Sig-<lb/>
ma Nu split their games with each<lb/>
other and end np with an identical 2<lb/>
and 4 record for the six games normal<lb/>
schedule. The scores were 14 to 13<lb/>
favor af The Duffers and 10 to 0<lb/>
favor of the Sigma Nu team of Doug<lb/>
Gray.<lb/>
All North State Conerence halfback<lb/>
Bob Perry hit a home run for Sigma<lb/>
Nu as Doug Gray tossed a one hit<lb/>
ball game in the brief three inning<lb/>
10 to 0 contest called by the umpire<lb/>
due to the score.<lb/>
These four contests rounded out<lb/>
action in League A for the week. The<lb/>
Has Beens were slated to play a best<lb/>
2 out of 3 game series with the Bomb-<lb/>
ers or Scoffers yesterday and today<lb/>
for the final college championship.<lb/>
THURSDAY, JULY T, ij60<lb/>
Bombers, Grads<lb/>
Dominate Play<lb/>
In League 'B'<lb/>
There were eight big gumes<lb/>
cm the soitbal field<lb/>
last week.<lb/>
Archie Brigman, a<lb/>
student, saw his team<lb/>
two games with the<lb/>
OB Tuesday by an<lb/>
Played<lb/>
s M League 4<lb/>
graduate<lb/>
sPiit itB<lb/>
Bohunks<lb/>
of 5<lb/>
ure as Doug Morgan get ready to swing.<lb/>
Gainey stands behind catcher Meri cripture as uou - - <lb/>
tramural slow pitch softball activity was completed this week with The Bombers capturing the college champion<lb/>
ship. <lb/>
Second Annual Table<lb/>
Tennis Tournament Sat.<lb/>
'Larry Crayton Ailing'<lb/>
WANTED!<lb/>
The EAST CAROLINIAN needs<lb/>
a Sports Editor during the<lb/>
Second Summer Session. It is<lb/>
a self help position which pays<lb/>
$37.50. Any Interested student<lb/>
please contact Pat Harvey or Bill<lb/>
Boyd.<lb/>
The Second Annual College Union<lb/>
Invitational Table Tennis Tournament<lb/>
will be conducted this Saturday in the<lb/>
College Union Recreation area.<lb/>
All ECC students, and other players<lb/>
invited by the tournament committee,<lb/>
may enter. It is requested that all in-<lb/>
terested players fill out proper entry<lb/>
blanks which may be obtained from<lb/>
the College Union Office. These forms<lb/>
should be turned in to the office prior<lb/>
to 6:00 p;m FrUay, if at all possible.<lb/>
All players presently enrolled in Sum-<lb/>
mer School at ECC may consider their<lb/>
entry fees for this event paid by their<lb/>
activity fee.<lb/>
The events have been screduled as<lb/>
follows: Jr. Singles and Doubles: 11:00<lb/>
a.m. to 2:00 p.m Men's Singles: 2:00<lb/>
p.m. to 5:00 p.m Men's Dubles: 6:00<lb/>
p.m. to 8:00 p.m Finals of men's<lb/>
events: 8:00 p.m.<lb/>
Awards will be given finalists in all<lb/>
events, and the semi-finalists in Men's<lb/>
Singles.<lb/>
ECC players are encouraged to enter<lb/>
tMs tournament, as it is designed to<lb/>
provide them with competition from<lb/>
N. C. and surrounding- states. The<lb/>
success of this event will determine<lb/>
whether events of this nature will be<lb/>
scheduled.<lb/>
Many Pirate Baseball Performers<lb/>
Playing In Tobacco State League<lb/>
Coach Jim Mallory, East Carolina's<lb/>
winning baseball -mentor, expects a<lb/>
much stronger team back in 1961 due<lb/>
to present actions on the part of many<lb/>
of his players.<lb/>
it above class D baseball. He was a<lb/>
' freshman here last year and figures<lb/>
! .ighly in Malloiy's future plans.<lb/>
Right handed Buck Fodges, the<lb/>
I .lighly sought Hamlet, N. C, football<lb/>
Good Advice To Anyone!<lb/>
North Carolina's strong Tobacco<lb/>
State League is offering many of his<lb/>
ball players the opportunity to play<lb/>
every few days and to gain the ex-<lb/>
perience that will be vital to them<lb/>
come next spring.<lb/>
The North State Championship win-<lb/>
ner expects to have a good solid fall<lb/>
practice after the fall quarter gets<lb/>
underway. To date he has Wake For-<lb/>
est lined up for two games next<lb/>
spring in addition to two big con-<lb/>
tests with Springfield, Mass and a<lb/>
single game with the University of<lb/>
Masrachusetts.<lb/>
Charles Johnson, Jim Martin, Myrl<lb/>
Bynum, Wally Cockrell, Nathan Green<lb/>
and Spencer Gaylord are all playing<lb/>
Tobacco State League baseball dur-<lb/>
ing the present summer.<lb/>
Crayton Ailing<lb/>
Way out in South Dakota, left<lb/>
nander Larry Crayton, a Greensboro,<lb/>
N. C, native, is recovering from a<lb/>
pulled muscle in his throwing arm.<lb/>
The Buc pitching star is playing<lb/>
eini-pro ball in South Dakota during<lb/>
Lie summer, lie is recovering quick'y<lb/>
ihough and should be hurling again<lb/>
in several more weeks.<lb/>
Kenny Snyder In Norfolk<lb/>
Former Woodrovv Wilson High<lb/>
School pitching ace, Ken Snyder, is<lb/>
playing across the Elizabeth River<lb/>
from his native Portsmouth, Va<lb/>
town during the present hardball sea-<lb/>
-on. He is playing in the Norfolk<lb/>
City League, one of the hottest semi-<lb/>
pro leagues in the south. Some rate<lb/>
ace is also an outstanding prospect<lb/>
tegarding his pitching ability. He is<lb/>
expected to make the Pirate hardball<lb/>
club and will give the staff mo-e<lb/>
depth.<lb/>
Pete Hunter's another right handed<lb/>
pitcher who can help ECC retain the<lb/>
1UG0 North State baseball crown, but<lb/>
he has not taken his entrance exams<lb/>
as of this date. He is slated to come<lb/>
here in the fall.<lb/>
A sure fielding infielder from Camp-<lb/>
bell College may register here during<lb/>
the fall quarter also. He is Morgan<lb/>
Harris, highly capable at second base<lb/>
or shortstop.<lb/>
The fall practice will turn up ap-<lb/>
proximately ')0r' of Mallory's 1960<lb/>
club and a largo turnout is expected.<lb/>
The big key though is the present<lb/>
playing of his ball players. This is<lb/>
the first summer when his players<lb/>
have been able to play on a semi-pro<lb/>
level and obtain a good job near<lb/>
their home club, in addition to having<lb/>
their college ccaeh to come by and<lb/>
observe them about once a month.<lb/>
Mallory does this in the role of an<lb/>
official umpire; quite unique but<lb/>
twite effective.<lb/>
1 and 7 to 6. The strong Old Gn<lb/>
laws was highly favored to com,<lb/>
first or seeend place to League <lb/>
final standings goiag into the  B<lb/>
ames ealier this week.<lb/>
Splitting of double I<lb/>
to be the habit of the<lb/>
quad as they also jplit ,<lb/>
with hd Emory's Nine 1 nar<lb/>
gins of 4 to 3 and 10 to 7.<lb/>
The Bomber- of Jay A p<lb/>
1 inched first place ml<lb/>
reek by knocking it<lb/>
.f Kaenord Walker once. I<lb/>
a- 8 to 5 but it <lb/>
story in the second contest<lb/>
evening. The Bom<lb/>
second lot - of the <lb/>
of The Bonunks b 8 v<lb/>
7 to 6 in two extra innii<lb/>
The Bombers with a<lb/>
C wins against only 2 inny<lb/>
Phillips' Scoff.<lb/>
capable of even tieing <lb/>
first place going into the<lb/>
ale Uus week. The on<lb/>
these two tight CO<lb/>
out by Knowles foi T<lb/>
Previously t<lb/>
Thui sdaj the Bum<lb/>
Nine Count . <lb/>
es of 12 to 2 s<lb/>
These eight<lb/>
ten man Blow pitch<lb/>
foi the week.<lb/>
yeatCrday with The B t <lb/>
Scoffers figured to be tin I<lb/>
t beat in League B <lb/>
Grads were rated 1<lb/>
chance to slip into <lb/>
final league standing<lb/>
tramurals Buy<lb/>
!f For Students<lb/>
several years from now.<lb/>
Working under such editors of tre EAST C ROLINlAN as Jim<lb/>
FerreW, Jan Ralby, Kathryn Johnson and Pat Harvey gives you a little<lb/>
insight regarding the overall picture of ECC through their eyes. It has<lb/>
been more than a journalistic .pleasure to work with these people. The<lb/>
capable staff we have this session as listed on page two are conscientious,<lb/>
hard workers also. It is no fun too produce a newspaper even one day a<lb/>
week. In fact, to date, we have no full staff for next session including the<lb/>
position of Sports Editor. The reason is quite evident. The pay is rediculous<lb/>
for the work involved. You must like this type of work to become involved in<lb/>
it. It is just that simple.<lb/>
As you look back over your college years your main thoughts are<lb/>
why didn't you do better in that course or why didnt you participate in<lb/>
that activity more, etcWe can always Monday morning quarterback after<lb/>
it is all over. We are not successful by just obtaining a B.S. or an M.A.<lb/>
Degree by any reason. We are sh r.y in a position to apply ourselves in<lb/>
a more mature manner and will be accepted as such; nothing more or<lb/>
nothing less, in my opinion.<lb/>
With these words of regression I shall never he putting another<lb/>
syllable on this page for the rest of my life perhaps. Perhaps I shall never<lb/>
he nothing more but a visitor and an alumnus of this state owned institu-<lb/>
tion. One thing is for certain thougr. I personally desire any faculty mem-<lb/>
ber, administrator or student of this college whom I might know, to visit<lb/>
me at the Army Hospital if he is ever on the premises of Fort Lee, Virginia<lb/>
between now and 1994.<lb/>
Being a Commanding Officer in the Army is quite unique and amax-<lb/>
ingly interesting. All types of situations and questons arise. If I remain<lb/>
in the Army as a career officer I shall be asked this question by many a<lb/>
young man. "Where do you think I could obtain a good college education?"<lb/>
Mltotbali star, leave OrswnviHe to enter the Air Force as a young' Lieu- I My answer would be in the form of a question. It would simply be, "have<lb/>
tenant and you wonder where all your other buddies, friends, etc will be j you ever heard of Bast Carolina College in Greenville. North CaroHnaT<lb/>
Many ECC Students<lb/>
Use Golf Range<lb/>
Mr. Simon Moye, local Greenville<lb/>
Businessman, and East Carolina's In-<lb/>
tramural Directors coordinated their<lb/>
eforts for the student's use of the<lb/>
Golf Driving Range Tuesday.<lb/>
Over 100 students enjoyed the use<lb/>
of the driving range located on the<lb/>
yden Highway. Mr. Moye allowed<lb/>
he students to use it free as long<lb/>
s they found room to get up to the<lb/>
line just by showing their I. D. Cards.<lb/>
 small fee was paid by ECC Intra-<lb/>
murals but it was quite negligible con-<lb/>
sidering the number of participants<lb/>
on the driving range.<lb/>
The Greenville Golf Range is lo-<lb/>
cated on the Ayden Highway, appro-<lb/>
ximately one mile from West End<lb/>
Circle towards Ayden. Mr. Moye is<lb/>
coordinating with ECC officials in<lb/>
hopes of a similar event in the near<lb/>
future.<lb/>
Men and women students enjoyed<lb/>
driving the golf balls off the tee,<lb/>
sometimes a short ways and occasion-<lb/>
ally several hundred yards. This ef-<lb/>
fort by East Carolina's Intramural<lb/>
Directors was the fourth leisure time<lb/>
activity held for the students this ses-<lb/>
sion. One was softball, the second was<lb/>
a horseshoe tournament, the third a<lb/>
tennis tournament and the fourth was<lb/>
the free use of the Putt-Putt golf<lb/>
course for the students. A proposed<lb/>
swimming tournament planned for the<lb/>
students was cancelled last week due<lb/>
to a lack of student participation.<lb/>
More activities for the students<lb/>
through the point efforts of the col-<lb/>
lege union, the entertainment com-<lb/>
mittee and the intramural program,<lb/>
have been held this session than dur-<lb/>
ing any other summer session in the<lb/>
past.<lb/>
The Greenville "Putt-Putt" Golf<lb/>
Course was quite busy during the<lb/>
past Tuesday afternoon. From hours<lb/>
one o'clock until six o'clock in the<lb/>
evening, several hundred East Caro-<lb/>
'ina men and women enjoyed the use<lb/>
t f the Putt-Putt course.<lb/>
The use of such was absolutely free<lb/>
to them except for displaying their,<lb/>
student Identification Card. Several<lb/>
free games were given away to stu-<lb/>
dents during the evening for low<lb/>
scores and holes in one.<lb/>
Mr. Robert Barnes is the owner of<lb/>
the Greenville "Putt-Putt" Golf Course<lb/>
Assisting him is Mr. Bob Johnson.<lb/>
Mr. Barnes, a Wilson, N. C. native<lb/>
was ouite cooperative in making the<lb/>
?ourst available to ECC students for<lb/>
a minimum fee paid for by ECC In-<lb/>
tramurals.<lb/>
With the combined use of the Driv-<lb/>
ing range adjacent to the "Putt-Putt"<lb/>
course, East Carolina students had 9<lb/>
good time of golf on Tuesday.<lb/>
Mr. Barnes expressed great de'ight<lb/>
in the way the college students con-<lb/>
ducted themselves on the very crowded<lb/>
course. He hones to offer very special<lb/>
low rates to the students during the<lb/>
second summer session on a regular<lb/>
basis. He also desires to have the stu-<lb/>
dents come out again one day during<lb/>
the second session for almost no cost<lb/>
to the Intramural Program and no<lb/>
cost to the students at all.<lb/>
This cooperative effort by the Wil-<lb/>
son native was another display of<lb/>
good sportsmanship by a local busi-<lb/>
nessman.<lb/>
Alphin Takes T. T.<lb/>
Novice Tournament<lb/>
Jay Alphin won the f<lb/>
Table Tennis Tournament of<lb/>
mer by defeating William M<lb/>
in the finals, with scores 21 14-21,<lb/>
Jl-1 Alphin took a well<lb/>
game, only to have sfatl<lb/>
back with a fast win h<lb/>
match. A.phin's consist<lb/>
blanu made the different<lb/>
match to win the toun.<lb/>
Alphin defeated Dai F<lb/>
the first round 1'1-lT. 18-21<lb/>
?hen defeated hard-hitting I<lb/>
in the semi-finals with 21-P,<lb/>
22-20.<lb/>
Matthews lefeated<lb/>
(21-18, 21-15), Jimmy lid<lb/>
21-15), and Latry Huff<lb/>
21-13, 21-16), oi his way I<lb/>
Huf'stet'or's steady defe<lb/>
.iously halted Flee<lb/>
George Kellenberger, an.i I Mar-<lb/>
tin, failed to stop t<lb/>
ot Matthews in the semi-fin<lb/>
All players are re<lb/>
Invitational Tournan  I<lb/>
BC players and th -<lb/>
(James Committee is beinj<lb/>
day. July H. and will las<lb/>
fmther information '<lb/>
Union Bulletin Board.<lb/>
Tournament Winner<lb/>
Bombers Win!<lb/>
Jay Alphin's Bombers won the<lb/>
1st SS slow pitch softball title by<lb/>
beating The Has Beens 2 games<lb/>
of 3. The losing Has Beens thus<lb/>
won second place. Third place in<lb/>
the final standings was won by<lb/>
The Duffers, coached by Michael<lb/>
Bunting.<lb/>
Jay Alphin reaped two stM<lb/>
honors for himself during the P<lb/>
first Pfr<lb/>
week. His softball tex.m n<lb/>
in the college plsyoffs as<lb/>
their respective league. He n<lb/>
place in the college table tennis<lb/>
ell  "<lb/>
first<lb/>
toot-<lb/>
  - <lb/>

</div></body></text></TEI>